I have to vote NO wishfully.
A far truer vote would be: I don't know.
The way financial markets operate influenced by those enlightened rating agencies has convinced me that anything is possible.
This view is not rooted in what has happened to Greece, Ireland and now Portugal, each took different roads to bail-out.
It is rather on the dynamics and logic embedded in the rapacious capitalist system left to operate wholly unchecked.
Spain is simply too big to fail. It would spell the end of the Euro as we know it. The bazooka designed and later reinforced by Eurozone and larger EU would not be powerful enough to kill off a sustained market onslaught against Spanish government bonds.
That being the bottom line leads me to believe that while anything can happen nowadays, no matter how obnoxious or far-fetched, a very different storyline would ensue should Spain get boxed in.
Perhaps that is also the unsaid expectation of EU politicians: Spain looks more promising, diversified, competitive, is big enough and has done some housekeeping already.
The underlying huge issue however remains how to get peripheral economies to grow their way out of current financial squeeze(?).
It is a question that must be answered at national level first and foremost but at Eurozone level too.
A two or three-speed European Union is a win-lose scenario whose outcome is ultimately unpredictable.
A downward economic spiral is unsustainable by definition. The longer it lasts the greater the dangers of other risks ballooning.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário