sexta-feira, 30 de abril de 2010
TEc "Going for markets" A short view on financial market's onslaught against sovereign debt
Misguided or not a backlash against the markets ensues when sovereign debt comes under blatant fire from one day to the next.
True this is the financial system everybody knows we live in.
True politics plays a part but it is the markets who decide how risky to loan money to country A or B.
Importantly, it is governments of the day that go to the markets seeking finance to make up for shortfalls when no other source can be tapped.
So the best thing really is for countries never to place themselves at the mercy of financial 'sharks'.
Yet even if financial markets advised by those rating agencies - whose credibility is tainted following their recent massive cock-ups - are oblivious to anything other than profit making, politicians still have a duty to their constituents and their countries' national interest.
It is not baffling when the background to current problems is scrutinised against a timeline.
If the system is woefully unfair inflicting further damage to already vulnerable targets only a political approach may eventually begin to face it head-on.
But then who ever said that money lending was about fairness?
None of this, of course, condones Greece's peculiar case.Or that of any other State that recurrently and consistently fakes accounts or clearly overspends beyond its means.
From a Portuguese perspective if Greece had not triggered the ongoing sovereign debt crisis for reasons mostly of its own making, would Portugal now have to face additional borrowing costs?
True this is the financial system everybody knows we live in.
True politics plays a part but it is the markets who decide how risky to loan money to country A or B.
Importantly, it is governments of the day that go to the markets seeking finance to make up for shortfalls when no other source can be tapped.
So the best thing really is for countries never to place themselves at the mercy of financial 'sharks'.
Yet even if financial markets advised by those rating agencies - whose credibility is tainted following their recent massive cock-ups - are oblivious to anything other than profit making, politicians still have a duty to their constituents and their countries' national interest.
It is not baffling when the background to current problems is scrutinised against a timeline.
If the system is woefully unfair inflicting further damage to already vulnerable targets only a political approach may eventually begin to face it head-on.
But then who ever said that money lending was about fairness?
None of this, of course, condones Greece's peculiar case.Or that of any other State that recurrently and consistently fakes accounts or clearly overspends beyond its means.
From a Portuguese perspective if Greece had not triggered the ongoing sovereign debt crisis for reasons mostly of its own making, would Portugal now have to face additional borrowing costs?
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