sexta-feira, 5 de março de 2010
TEc "Europe's hypochondriacs" The years ahead
European governments are generally faced with tough decisions in the short to medium run.
Most countries were severely battered but their ability to check fiscal deficits and public debt bringing both under control, hinges on political will as much as it does on overall economic and financial position before and after the recession.
The common denominator is of course the huge budget deficits they ran up - even Germany grudgingly broke through the 3% Maastricht ceiling if only marginally at 0.5% - adding up to the public debt pile.
Economies being so varied in their intrinsic strengths pose very different challenges to governments as well.
It makes every sense that rating agencies should value the ratio of interest payment on debt to government revenue (setting a 10% limit) over the ratio of public debt to GDP.
This is why Greece's case - discarding deceitful accounting altogether - raises concerns of default while Japan's, having a much higher public internally financed debt to GDP, does not.
Indeed the more information that reaches me on the state of public finances in countries across the world the more I realise the requirement for a case-by-case (country-by-country) analysis to be vital.For every similarity found at least one relevant difference may be spotted.
This is why some economies will balance their books faster than others.
This is why some economies may be OK with certain levels of public debt while others may not.
The short-term issue with longer-term implications of utmost importance is how to bring healthy sustained growth to European economies.Expanding economies of their own make those gloomy percentages look more manageable while allowing governments some respite too.
Sluggish growth on the other hand can make the adjustment a great deal more painful.
The years ahead will be critical for politicians whether in power or in the opposition.
European countries basically demand no-nonsense policies based on as wide a political and social consensus as achievable.
A trying time no doubt wherein some countries will fare better than others.
The race is on...
Left with no options Greece -an extreme case- is leading the way.
Most countries were severely battered but their ability to check fiscal deficits and public debt bringing both under control, hinges on political will as much as it does on overall economic and financial position before and after the recession.
The common denominator is of course the huge budget deficits they ran up - even Germany grudgingly broke through the 3% Maastricht ceiling if only marginally at 0.5% - adding up to the public debt pile.
Economies being so varied in their intrinsic strengths pose very different challenges to governments as well.
It makes every sense that rating agencies should value the ratio of interest payment on debt to government revenue (setting a 10% limit) over the ratio of public debt to GDP.
This is why Greece's case - discarding deceitful accounting altogether - raises concerns of default while Japan's, having a much higher public internally financed debt to GDP, does not.
Indeed the more information that reaches me on the state of public finances in countries across the world the more I realise the requirement for a case-by-case (country-by-country) analysis to be vital.For every similarity found at least one relevant difference may be spotted.
This is why some economies will balance their books faster than others.
This is why some economies may be OK with certain levels of public debt while others may not.
The short-term issue with longer-term implications of utmost importance is how to bring healthy sustained growth to European economies.Expanding economies of their own make those gloomy percentages look more manageable while allowing governments some respite too.
Sluggish growth on the other hand can make the adjustment a great deal more painful.
The years ahead will be critical for politicians whether in power or in the opposition.
European countries basically demand no-nonsense policies based on as wide a political and social consensus as achievable.
A trying time no doubt wherein some countries will fare better than others.
The race is on...
Left with no options Greece -an extreme case- is leading the way.
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