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Mr Khan said:
generic-user-1 said:
Mr Khan said:
Wyrdness said:
The Euro was a flawed disaster to begin with I doubt Greece leaving would end all of the problems tbh, it'll certainly impact me and those of us currently working in the financial sector in the immediate future though.

The only flaw was the political control over the central bank. If Draghi had carte blanche to do what needed to be done, as Ben Bernanke/Janet Yellen had, much of the mess could have been averted; easy money in the short term should have been matched by schemes to close deficits in the medium term, which is similar to what happened in the US, albeit not planned by anyone (in terms of deficit closing because of the chaotic Sequestration policy due to government gridlock).

Soft money policies can't solve all the problems, but we've seen in Europe how very real the human costs are of a "shock therapy" style approach to structural reform and state debt. Although EU should have been paying closer attention to Russia in the 90s to know that it was going to be a terrible idea in the first place.



they should have never let draghi take over the ecb, hes an idiot, he lifes in a bubble. he is trying things that never worked. QE was never a good idea, it didnt worked in japan and it didnt worked in the usa and it will not work in europe. QE just blow up bubbles till they burst. but his buddies at the banks wanted MOAR cheap money so he delivered MOAR money... he could have handed out money directly to every citizen, or invest in real things with fresh ecb money, that wouldnt have broken any laws, QE does.

QE isn't a magic bullet, but it does soften the blow. What *works* is demand-spurring infrastructure projects and other forms of wise government spending, but often there is not the will to increase spending in an economic downturn. Being removed from politics, banks are free to apply their tools, and QE at least encourages business spending (because punting the interest rates means there's much less incentive for businesses to save), and cheap credit saves at least some distressed businesses. Now this creates the problems of "zombie firms", but in light of a lack of government will to do what is right for its people, QE can provide some help in terms of mitigating the human costs of an economic collapse.

QE isnt working and cant work, the banks dont have more money if they sell high value bonds, they need those to get fresh money from the ecb, the only positive thing about QE is the negative interest on bonds, but that hurts other companys and banks.

its way better to send every citizen a check with the mail, thats fresh money going directly into the economy. or buy greek bonds and make a haircut, the ecb cant get broke, they can easyly print the lost money new.  but those things are evil because the banks dont profit from em...