Posted: May 26th, 2012 | Author: Maha Rafi Atal | Filed under: Economics | Tags: Angela Merkel, austerity, Christine Lagarde, euro, European Union, eurozone, Germany, Greece | No Comments »
Over at Foreign Exchange, I’ve got a post up on the euro. Short version: all signs now point to a Greek exit, and Christine Lagarde has given a statement indicated there is no turning back.
It sounds as if she’s essentially saying to the Greeks and others in Europe, you’ve had a nice time and now it’s payback time.
“That’s right.†She nods calmly. “Yeah.â€
And what about their children, who can’t conceivably be held responsible? “Well, hey, parents are responsible, right? So parents have to pay their tax.â€
That fits entirely with the strict language she used when I interviewed her in August:
She knows this is a tough sell. “You first have a period [after making cuts] where growth takes a hit and goes negativeâ€â€”and with that come unavoidable human costs in lost jobs and social services. Political feuding over controversial cuts will only make the pain worse. How should ordinary people cope? She pauses. “It takes courage.â€
What are the implications of this tough stance:
Hypothetically, should Germany refuse to loosen the terms of its loans to Greece, the IMF could offer a bit of rope on its loans to Greece that would allow a left-wing Greek government to save face without upsetting the eurocart. But. as those of us who have followed her closely expected, Lagarde has unequivocally squashed that possibility in her remarks tonight.
Read the whole post here.
Posted: February 10th, 2012 | Author: Maha Rafi Atal | Filed under: Economics, Foreign Policy | Tags: Arab Spring, austerity, education, employment, Occupy, Occupy Wall Street, Paul Mason, revolution, students, unemployment, Why It's Kicking Off Everywhere, youth | No Comments »
Paul Mason, the Economics Editor of the BBC’s Newsnight program, has a new book out. In it, he argues that the myriad forms of protest we’ve seen over the last year – the Arab Spring, the Occupy movement, student protests, protests against austerity budgets in Europe, are linked, part of a global revolution. Over at my Forbes blog, I’ve got a long review of the book.
The links are, according to Mason:
1. “the near collapse of free-market capitalism,†and in particular the opportunities it presents to the young;
2. rapid demographic growth creating a “youth bulge,†where young people come to represent a growing percentage of a country’s overall population, compounding and amplifying the impact of point 1;
3. growth in educational attainment, which Mason uses to argue that the young people sans opportunity are those who played by the rules and feel their economic loss more acutely as a result. He calls them “graduates with no futureâ€;
4. “an upswing in technical innovation, a surge in desire for individual freedom and a change in human consciousness about what freedom means.†Technology and individualism, Mason says, allow protests to assume a networked structure than can overpower traditional hierarchies.
I’ve been skeptical of this argument since it first appeared on Mason’s blog a year ago.
The three core problems Mason identifies – youth unemployment, the youth demographic bulge, and the diminishing returns on education- are real ones. But in Mason’s account, they are depicted as three components of the same, global problem. That’s simply not accurate.
To learn exactly what’s wrong with Mason’s economic assumptions, and how a more rigorous look at the economic data undermines his argument, read the whole thing.