10 Apr 2012

A Too-Big-To-Fail Whale Tale, a Lousy Jobs Report, and CBS 60 Minutes Propagates "Greeks are Lazy" Mythology


Last week we told you about the "London Whale" - the London-based Bruno Iksil of JP Morgan Chase. He has reportedly amassed derivative positions so large that he's driving price moves in the $10 trillion market for credit derivative indexes. Is this yet another sign that too big to fail banks are taking outsized risks with federally insured money? Would they take this huge positions that have the ability to drive price movements in this fashion if they didn't know that their very existence was subsidized and that they had an implicit backstop from the central banks?
Does this make the case for the Volcker Rule, and if not, what does it make the case for? We will speak to author and financial commentator Karl Denninger about it during the show.

And US stocks fell today after the S and P closed out its worth week of 2012. Media reports are saying it is the reaction to a bad jobs report. We'll back up and look at the big unemployment picture with Karl Denninger, and get his take, as he has been writing about this since last week. And speaking of economic problems, 60 minutes ran a piece this weekend that we took a little offense at, namely the perpetuation of this myth that Greeks are "lazy." In one part of the erroneous segment, the reporter claimed that "in the past, if Greece found its accounts overdrawn it would simply print more money in order to accommodate the relaxed Greek lifestyle." This is ABSURD. It shows a complete lack of understand of monetary policy. The only way that a country can subsidize its lifestyle by printing money is if its currency is the global reserve currency. Ergo, the United States. When the united states prints money, it steals purchasing power from people all over the world who hold dollars. When the Greek government would print Drachmas, there were no foreign holders of that currency to rob from. The effect was only to steal money from the industrious Greeks in the private sector and transfer the wealth over the public sector. If there were any "lazy Greeks" who were being subsidized, it was at the expense of the "industrious Greeks."


60 minutes ran a piece this weekend that we took a little offense at, namely the perpetuation of this myth that Greeks are "lazy." In one part of the erroneous segment, the reporter claimed that "in the past, if Greece found its accounts overdrawn it would simply print more money in order to accommodate the relaxed Greek lifestyle." This is ABSURD. It shows a complete lack of understand of monetary policy.
The only way that a country can subsidize its lifestyle by printing money is if its currency is the global reserve currency. Ergo, the United States. When the united states prints money, it steals purchasing power from people all over the world who hold dollars. When the Greek government would print Drachmas, there were no foreign holders of that currency to rob from. The effect was only to steal money from the industrious Greeks in the private sector and transfer the wealth over the public sector. If there were any "lazy Greeks" who were being subsidized, it was at the expense of the "industrious Greeks." 

The 60 minutes piece titled, "An Imperfect Union," also attempts to paint the problems of Europe as those caused by an indulgent and profligate south that was living beyond its means at the expense of industrious northerners. One of the mistakes the producers make is to claim that the Germans run balanced budgets. In fact, Germany was a country that broke the very Maastricht treaty that it so clamored for by running deficits in excess of 3% of GDP. It continues to run budget deficits, despite the claims made by the producers at 60 minutes. 

We don't want to hammer CBS and 60 minutes too much for this. They do some good work, and we are appreciative. However, the way that Greece and the southern european countries are characterized in the media has become farcical. They have their own problems, no doubt, but these were problems that the southern countries had before they joined the Euro Area, and things were not as bad then. The subsidies did not come without a price. They meant more jobs and higher wages for the north, which was collecting future IOU's from countries like Greece and Italy.



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