Tuesday, August 21, 2012

@23:50, 8/20/12

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Greece has made a plan.  A plan is not beggars in the streets and food riots.
The money is loans. 
It may buy time to run but will not buy successful industries.
Selling intentions only works as I.P.O.s .  
There is nothing new there.

Germany backs Draghi bond plan against Bundesbank

Germany’s director at the ECB throws his weight behind mass purchases of Spanish and Italian debt to prevent the disintegration of the euro, marking a crucial turning point in the debt crisis.

This is a fire wall.

BBC  Europe:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19316221

"Germany puts pressure on Greece PM over bailout targets

Antonis Samaras Prime Minister Antonis Samaras needs to convince the rest of the eurozone of Greece's efforts
Greece must stick to its agreed bailout conditions, Germany says, at the start of a week in which Greece is expected to ask for more time to make cuts.
The German foreign minister Guido Westerwelle said a "softening" of reforms was not possible.
Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is to meet his German and French counterparts this week.
At issue is whether it has done enough to receive 31.5bn euros ($38.8bn; £24.7bn) in loans next month.
Greece needs this next installent of its second major international bailout in order to avoid a default.
Speaking after a meeting with the Greek foreign minister Dimitris Avramopoulos in Berlin, Mr Westerwelle reiterated that the final decision would depend on an assessment of Greece's progress towards cutting its deficit being carried out by the group of lenders known as the troika.
Inspectors representing the European Union, International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank will publish their report next month on Greece, particularly its spending cuts, and efforts to raise revenue by clamping down on tax evasion and privatising state assets.
Mr Westerwelle also pledged support for Greece staying within the eurozone.

Start Quote

In Germany the government is under pressure not to soften by one single millimetre”
"The German government wants us to remain together in the eurozone [but] the key to success lies in Athens," he said.
Finnish foreign minister Erkki Tuomioja, whose government has in the past publicly discussed a possible Greek exit, said he thought Greece could be forced to default on its debts.
"We certainly do not hope this will happen, but without further support or changes to its programme it looks likely," he told the BBC.
He said a Greek exit was being talked about among eurozone governments, although "not on official terms".
"I would expect that this is something that is being referred to in the corridors," he said.
When asked about a possible break-up of the euro he said: "This is something that everyone... is looking into but it is not something that can or should be discussed openly," he said.
'Transparent procedure'

Analysis

Greece is still under pressure to cut ever deeper to secure the next tranche of its international loan.
It needs the 31.5bn euros over the next few weeks in order to stave off bankruptcy. But for that it must find a huge package of savings worth 11.5bn euros.
It is thought that the Greek government is almost there in terms of identifying what will be cut from the public purse.
Pensions and welfare benefits will be slashed and another 34,000 civil servants are to go.
The Greek PM will put these measures to the head of the eurogroup on Wednesday and he will discuss them with Chancellor Merkel and Francois Hollande later in the week.
He will also broach the topic of whether Greece will get another two years to reduce its deficit, to try to reduce the pain on the Greek people.
Whether or not he will get it is another thing altogether.
On Wednesday, Mr Samaras will meet Jean-Claude Juncker, the Luxembourg premier who heads the group of eurozone finance ministers.
The Greek PM will meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday and French President Francois Hollande on Saturday.
Mr Samaras' expected plan to request a two-year extension on its austerity programme has provoked frustration among other European politicians.
"There's a process we're engaged in to evaluate the efforts made by Greece in recent months, which we know was set back by elections," European Affairs Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said on France's Europe 1 radio. "We'll evaluate the situation and try to take a common position."
Some politicians in Germany have opposed giving more leeway to Greece.
Michael Fuchs, deputy chairman of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU parliamentary group, said his faction would not give Greece the two-year extension it wants on its austerity programme.
"We have decided - the CDU-CSU faction in the Bundestag - that there would be no more expansion at all," he told BBC Radio 4's World at One programme.
"We think that it's enough time and it's very difficult for us to explain to our constituencies in light of next year's elections why we are giving them more time."
"I really think Greece has to find a solution for themselves first before we can help them anymore."
Financing hole BBC Berlin correspondent Stephen Evans said the differing political situations were determining the conflicting signals from Berlin and Athens.
"In Greece the prime minister has promised a softening of the bailout terms, whereas in Germany the government is under pressure not to soften by one single millimetre," our correspondent said.
Stuck in recession, Greece is heavily in debt and has implemented more than 43bn euros worth of austerity measures since 2010 in order to try to bring down its budget deficit.
The German weekly Der Spiegel has reported that an initial assessment by the inspectors suggested Greece may need to cover a financing hole of up to 14bn euros over the next two years, rather than the 11.5bn Athens has identified for 2013 and 2014.
Last week, Greece was able to raise 4.06bn euros with an issue of three-month treasury bills, but the government had to offer an interest rate of 4.43% to attract investors.
It was expected to use this money to make a 3.2bn euro repayment, due to the European Central Bank on Monday. The ECB declined to comment on whether it had yet received the funds."


I will see how tomorrow goes.   There may be news rather than synopsis and speculation.

I have an errand to run a few hours in the morning and must get to the food markets.




















posted by null at The Agonist - thoughtful, global, timely - 3 hours ago
William Booth | Cuidad Juarez, Mexico | August 20 WaPo - When this city was among the most murderous in the world, the morgue ran out of room, the corpses stacked to the ceiling in the wheezing walk-in ...
 
In Juarez the reduction in murder is more the subversion of the army and police.  The drug trade is dominant and there is little hope to the north and none to the south.
 
 
 
 
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