S&P depreciates much of old Europe: too much or not enough?
The ‘what’ of it all
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services stripped triple-A
ratings from France and Austria and downgraded seven others, including Spain,
Italy, Portugal, Malta, Slovakia, Cyprus and Slovenia. It retained the triple-A
rating on Europe's No. 1 economy, Germany. France and Austria were downgraded
by one notch from AAA to AA+; Malta, Slovakia and Slovenia were also downgraded
by one notch. S&P lowered the ratings of Italy, Spain, Portugal and Cyprus
by two notches. When you have to move your belt over more than one notch
at a time it’s a big deal, so too with ratings.
Downgraded for ‘inadequate
action’
In December S&P had placed 15 of the 17 euro-zone
countries on watch for possible downgrades It said Friday it had decided to
lower the debt ratings of nine of them because it felt the currency bloc has so
far failed to take adequate action. But does that make sense? In what context are the ratings made? The current Zone? The prospective Zone? Until you know the context ratings are not really possible but S&P has plowed ahead.
Rating upheld for ‘inadequate
action?’
I guess Germany retained its ‘AAA’ for the same reason: the Zone
has done so little. Had it done more, it
certainly would have taken more of Germany’s resources. So in some sense the S&P is rating Germany as if it will stay on the sidelines. In that it is endorsing a certain form of the Zone with Germany's rating. The Zone is left with an EFSF
(Europeans Finding Safety For-now) floundering. A fund has a hard-time getting
a rating better than those that back it. And the bulk of the backing for the still
AAA rated EFSF is from less than AAA-rated countries in the aftermath of the
S&P downgrades. How long can that last?
If it lasts surely it limits any gain in size if the rating is to be upheld.
Bye-bye fund flexibility.
Euro takes a hit
The euro fell sharply, hitting an intraday low of
$1.2623, its weakest level since late August 2010. The euro has lost more than
10% against the dollar since late October. It is one of the main casualties of
the downgrade process though it’s a casualty that will help to boost growth.
You can’t shrink yourself to
prosperity
S&P did have the insight to see the limits to the ‘Germanization’
of EMU policy, saying. "We believe that a reform process based on a pillar
of fiscal austerity alone risks becoming self-defeating, as domestic demand
falls in line with consumers' rising concerns about job security and disposable
incomes, eroding national tax revenues."
2-Tonic is wrong elixir?
EMU’s policy thrust has been Teutonic, well too-Teutonic throughout
the Obama Presidency. Even the UK adopted it as part of some pied piper
progression (although Wagner does not usually have that effect on people) in
the wake of Obama’s first G-20 summit. Had Europe and the G-20 instead accepted the Obama
plan for stimulus at Obama’s first summit, global growth would be better now and
government revenues would be higher. Unemployment would be lower and yes debt
levels higher but debt ratios would
probably not be as bad as they are now. And all this angst about it, in all probability,
never would have arisen. Countries would not be like a wolf caught in a trap
pondering gnawing off one foot to go free. But that is what has become of
Europe.
The easy way out
We see this on Wall Street a lot. When a firm gets in trouble
and starts missing its earnings it starts cutting expenses. In the financial
industry and many others it is the easiest thing to do. But the trick is to cut
in a way that does not harm revenue growth. The real trick when earnings miss
is to expand sales but few firms have that acumen. Cutting is easier and that
is true for countries too. Got a budget problems Raise taxes! Cut some expenses!
Does that hurt growth? Probably but you get some kudos for taking a tough step
even if it is in the wrong direction. European taxes already are so high they
among the eight wonders of the world. They are about to get ‘K’ status as a new
peak. But don’t try to climb them.
S&P does Zone disservice
In the END S&P has executed a bunch of downgrades that do
not add up to much. The real issue is not that the EMU has not done enough but that
it has no sense of what it is doing and where it is going. Until the Zone has a
sense of common purpose (other than not drowning and not letting the weak drag
down the strong) it cannot be successful and there will be more downgrades to
come. Germany should not be rewarded for sitting on the sidelines. Keeping its
AAA just gives it something to defend and makes it less likely to throw its lot
in with the rest. Germans are going to think that staying on the sidelines is a
good policy. It is not. Or to put it another way, it is not, if the e-Zone wants
to survive intact. But what does that mean? Who or what is the ‘e-Zone’ and, in that
sentence, what DOES it WANT? The Zone is not a thing. It is a concept. And each
member has in its mind a different concept. And that is why in the end it
fails. S&P has done EMU no favors especially not by playing favorites with the
downgrades.
2 comments:
The euro zone is in terrible terrible shape their is one thing thats certain. More downgrades are coming.
Downgrades will come and go.
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