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72   American in Japan   2012 Jul 9, 4:19pm  

I have one friend who says Europe has solved its problems and is on its way up from here. I just can't believe him...

73   tdeloco   2012 Jul 10, 1:31pm  

American in Japan says

I have one friend who says Europe has solved its problems and s on its way up from here. I just can't believe him...

People can be blindly optimistic.

It is clear to me that they solved one of the many structural problems, however they are still not on equal footing as the United States.

74   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Jul 12, 5:30am  

Here's part of the (present) state of Europe, as told by a European Parliamentarian

What follows is a snippet. Here's a link to his full address to Americans: http://www.geertwilders.nl/index.php/component/content/article/87-news/1795-speech-geert-wilders-at-the-western-conservative-summit-denver-30-june-2012)

Certain parts of our inner cities no longer look like Europe. They look like suburbs of Cairo, Rabat, Algiers, Damascus or Mecca.

As the Muslim population is concentrated in urban areas, many European cities have very large Islamic concentrations. We are confronted with headscarves and burkas, polygamy, female genital mutilation, honor-killings.

During the past three decades, Europe made a fatal mistake. It allowed millions of people from Islamic countries to immigrate into Europe. So many people rooted in a culture entirely different from our own Judeo-Christian and humanist tradition have entered Europe that our heritage, our freedoms, our prosperity and our culture are in danger.

Perhaps, many Americans still believe that Europe is the place they know from a tourist trip or from their grandparents' stories. This Europe is on the verge of disappearing.

"In each one of our cities" wrote the Italian author Oriana Fallaci shortly before her death in 2006, "there is a second city, a state within the state, a government within the government. A Muslim city, a city ruled by the Koran." – End of quote.

"The Islamic Republic of Europe" - it's only a matter of demography and time.

75   freak80   2012 Jul 12, 5:37am  

B.A.C.A.H. says

"In each one of our cities" wrote the Italian author Oriana Fallaci shortly before her death in 2006, "there is a second city, a state within the state, a government within the government. A Muslim city, a city ruled by the Koran." – End of quote.

God Bless...er...Allah Bless Europe.

76   EBGuy   2012 Jul 12, 6:04am  

From the "what's a strong currency to do files":
I almost did a spit take on the paper last week when I read that the Danes and Swiss are now offering negative rates on their short term bonds.

77   American in Japan   2012 Jul 17, 5:51pm  

A not so optimistic view of Europe from Charles Hugh Smith...

http://www.oftwominds.com/blogjuly12/EU-death-spiral6-12.html

78   freak80   2012 Jul 18, 2:00am  

Yikes it's almost like there's no free lunch or something.

80   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Jul 18, 5:17am  

Those articles are hilarious, because like so many others penned by elites who focus too much on the palace potentiates they're ignoring the big picture.

Demographics is the big picture, not the economic tides.

You don't think so? Just ask Native Americans who faced the demographic changes in their continent during various and sundry nineteenth century USA economic crises.

John Mauldin wrote last week in his economics web site that while, ahem, Europeans are no longer a religious people, he reckons that they are finding a new secular religion, a religion of some kind of federated/integrated European entity.

In the context of the trends and changes that are much larger than "Euro-this, sovereign debt - that", I suppose he is partly right, though missing the main point. There is a vibrant and growing demographic in Europe which in time will allow "the Europeans" to grow out of their problems, and they are religious Europeans, too. But the religion is not the "secular" religion for a united Europe, unless you mean for a "united" European Islamic Republic. No telling what may come of those sovereign debt notes in the decades to come under sharia law.

81   freak80   2012 Jul 18, 5:24am  

B.A.C.A.H. says

But the religion is not the "secular" religion for a united Europe, unless you mean for a "united" European Islamic Republic. No telling what may come of those sovereign debt notes in the decades to come under sharia law.

True.

And you thought the hated Christians were your worst enemy...

82   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Jul 18, 6:52am  

Part of me says there is entirely too much pessimism about Europe. The Germans won't let the EU fail, it's crucial, absolutely vital, to the German economy. Europe can get by without Germany and just default - but the Germans can't lose BOTH loan payments and the Common Market without destroying Germany's way of life.

Merkel's footdragging is only giving Germany a Cheap Charlie Rep, instead of establishing itself as the Hero and Savior.

83   tdeloco   2012 Jul 18, 5:57pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Demographics is the big picture, not the economic tides.

Yes for the long term; about 2 decades or more. But for the next 15 years, this won't matter.

In terms of the economy, they just keep kicking the can down the road, and I think they can only keep this up for a few more years (maybe 5?). The dam will break much sooner than most people think, and that is a big concern.

84   Randy H   2012 Jul 18, 11:58pm  

thunderlips11 says

Part of me says there is entirely too much pessimism about Europe. The Germans won't let the EU fail, it's crucial, absolutely vital, to the German economy. Europe can get by without Germany and just default - but the Germans can't lose BOTH loan payments and the Common Market without destroying Germany's way of life.

Merkel's footdragging is only giving Germany a Cheap Charlie Rep, instead of establishing itself as the Hero and Savior.

Homo Economicus. A Legendary Creature, like Bigfoot, claimed to exist by Pseudoscientists.

I couldn't disagree more. Germany does not need most of Europe at all. Germany lives in a permanent state of austerity, suffers from a strong Euro as they're an export-driven economy, and is most at risk from an entitlements cliff that dwarves that of the US. They won't receive any relief from their neighbors, all of which have even worse demographically-driven entitlement cliffs.

Germany has been facing a declining "global share" of value-weighted exports while Japan has been mostly holding steady and the US has been increasing (against what current common wisdom and pop hype has told you, the US continues to increase global share of value weighted trade -- the only non Asian country still growing). Germany has huge problems, and those problems are only further complicated by carrying Europe on their backs.

The ONLY reason Germany would keep supporting the EMU is for geopolitical reasons. I listen to Deutsche Welle in German quite a bit, and I'd say 90% of the discussions are purely political in nature and center around whether Germany is better off trying to make Europe into Germany, something which many believe is folly (myself included), or whether they're better off reclaiming Germany as its sovereign self.

85   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Jul 19, 12:21am  

Randy H says

Germany has been facing a declining "global share" of value-weighted exports

Let's put that in context. The total value of German exports has doubled over the past decade:

http://www.tradingeconomics.com/germany/exports

Randy H says

Germany does not need most of Europe at all. Germany lives in a permanent state of austerity, suffers from a strong Euro as they're an export-driven economy, and is most at risk from an entitlements cliff that dwarves that of the US.

Germany is certainly not in a permanent state of Austerity. It is not Ireland. The German economy is very healthy, from unemployment to exports, it has all the marks of a bustling economy, despite the Great Recession. The Germans may want Austerity for Europe but certainly not for themselves, as recent election results illustrated with Merkel's party being handed several key defeats.

Where do the bulk of German exports go to? Europe.
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_1V7wnZxPqok/S4d4imEOwhI/AAAAAAAAMpI/fOJlny_yXG8/s400/germany+trading+partners.jpg

The weaker Euro means that German Goods are actually more competitive now that they were a few years ago. Germany is not running an Austerity program.

Germany has a $150B Trade Surplus, contrasted with America's ~$600B Trade Deficit that only grows worse over time. We should kill to have those numbers.

The EU provides a host of benefits to Germany: A common currency and reduced trade barriers, both of which benefit Germany's exports (and banks). Leaving the EU will have severe effects on German exports; trade barriers will return, And if Austerity, which almost never works, becomes widespread in Europe, that will also have a negative effect on Germany's economy.

Germany has:
* Lower unemployment than the US
* More productivity per worker
* A massive Trade Surplus
* Less Debt than the US

86   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Jul 19, 1:43am  

A little more chart porn:

The Euro was the best thing that ever happened to Germany.

87   American in Japan   2012 Jul 28, 11:05pm  

Waiting for this week's European Bank offer...

89   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Aug 5, 2:26pm  

Ah yes, words are important

thunderlips11 says

The Euro was the best thing that ever happened to Germany.

90   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Aug 6, 5:11am  

They sure are ;)

91   American in Japan   2012 Aug 6, 11:27am  

Wall Street closes at three-month high on hopes for Europe

"Sentiment in Spanish and Italian bond markets - the forefront of the three-year debt crisis - improved, with two-year Spanish yields falling to 3.42 percent on Monday, less than half of a late July high of over 7 percent."

Whatever, I'm still not convinced.

92   freak80   2012 Aug 7, 12:08am  

European headline risk will be back.

95   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Aug 17, 2:52pm  

How bad are things in Greece?

About as bad as they are in Japan:

from
http://www.indexmundi.com/greece/total_fertility_rate.html Total fertility rate: 1.39 children born/woman (2011 est.)

from
http://www.indexmundi.com/japan/total_fertility_rate.html 1.39 children born/woman (2011 est.)

for comparison from
http://www.indexmundi.com/united_states/total_fertility_rate.html Total fertility rate: 2.06 children born/woman (2011 est.)

97   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 4, 3:11pm  

American,

Europe is not American and Europe is not Japan. What is going on there is kinda fascinating, I agree. Kinda like a slow motion crash.

Just asking: being as how you are an American (not European) in Japan (not Europe) why the obsession with Europe?

98   American in Japan   2012 Oct 5, 12:46am  

I may live their in the future. What's more it seems like world markets hinge on the precedents being set in Europe are affecting world markets...but what do I know...

Another one funny or not :

Spain finance ministers claim there is no bailout!

99   American in Japan   2012 Oct 5, 9:59pm  

IMF's Lagarde says talks with Greece "very productive" ml

I hope so for your sake Lagarde...the emperor isn't as forgiving as...

100   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 7, 1:06pm  

I posted on a different thread before, based on their identical birth rates, things are just about as bad in Greece as in Japan.

But things are also just about as good in Greece as in Japan,
American in Japan says

I hope so for your sake

sake as you point out that you hope, is very much different than ouzo, but also very much as good as ouzo.

101   American in Japan   2012 Oct 8, 1:21am  

It was a line from *Return of the Jedi* except it goes."I hope so for your sake commander, the Emperor isn' t as forgiving as I am."

102   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 8, 12:49pm  

Sake might taste good like ouzo, but like the guy in Star Wars, The Emperor of Japan was also a bad dude, didn't take responsibility for what was done in his name in places like Nanking and Bataan.

103   American in Japan   2012 Oct 11, 12:02am  

I'm not a fan of the Japan emperor, but I was only referring to a movie here.

And this:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/another-extension-greece-now-seems-095247909.html

105   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 17, 1:06pm  

The question is the request for the bailout. The Spaniards should compare Iceland to Greece before they decide.

107   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Oct 18, 12:45am  

Hilarious. The STRIKE will hurt GDP?

But not the non-reality based Austerity measures?

Gotta love a one-sided article like this one.

111   coriacci1   2012 Nov 12, 11:42pm  

let’s all be like iceland!

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