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'Contagion' and Other Euro Myths

Wall Street Journal Original article ›

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John Cochrane provides a no-nonsense assessment of what is happening in the euro-zone financial crisis. He says Americans should stop swallowing all that talk about "contagion" from Ireland. He puts it in plain language- there is no bailout of Ireland, this bailout is about bailing out of German and British banks that made risky loan to Irish banks and the Irish government. And he says that European governments if they choose to bailout German or British banks should do so frankly and openly and not by covering it up as a country bailout. If they did this he fears the governments and the German and British banks would face some serious questioning about their risky bets on Irish debt and the Irish property bubble. The German insistence that debt-holders would have to take a haircut, or losses on the face value of their bonds, has been diluted by the French inserting a provision that this would be after 2013 and on a case by case basis. Cochrane sees the vagueness of a case by case threat as the worst combination possible. He says this relies too much on the assessments of IMF and EU officials. The result would be for big financial institutions to bet on a bailout and to lobby these same officials hard. Cochrane's says the big culprit in the problem facing the euro-zone is short term debt. If Europeans won't let governments default, then they must insist on long-term financing of government debt. It is the short term debt of these countries that creates a crisis atmosphere. If investors become pessimistic about long-term debt, bond prices can go down temporarily without causing damage. The way a crisis happens is bad news develops, and governments having financed with short term debt need new money to pay off old debts. The way to handle this refinancing crisis is to have a large forced exchange of maturing short-term debt for long-term debt, and this is what occurs in "restructuring." And this kind of restructuring ocurred with the Brady plan that helped Latin American economies recover from a debt crisis in the late 1980's and early 1990's. This is the only viable solution, as it will be virtually impossible to bail out all euro-zone countries- Portugal, Spain, Italy and so on. For the US this is an eye opener to get its own financial house in order. US government debt is also tilted to short-term debt maturities, with the majority rolled over every year. and the Fed's quantitative easing will tilt this further to shorter term debt. And in the US, many states and local governments are in serious financial trouble.

The growing debate over bondholder haircut, easy money policies, sacrifices, and austerity policies.

11/25/2010

This debate puts British prime minister Cameron, and German chancellor Angela Merkel, on one side, with US President Obama, US central bank chairman Bernanke and other leaders on the other side. The blanket Irish guarantee of all Irish bank debt is an example of improper action that could have prevented the need for an Irish bailout, when guaranteeing only retail Irish bank debt would have worked. Merkel has insisted on bondholders sharing in bank losses, and tougher action required for countries receiving bailouts.

Grouped Articles

A Crisis Needing More Sacrifice

New York Times 11/25/2010

Crises Shake German Trust in Euro Zone

New York Times 11/26/2010

EU Outlines Bond Restructuring Plan

Wall Street Journal 11/28/2010

Europe Backs Irish Rescue and New Rules on Bailouts

New York Times 11/28/2010

Spain, Italy Seek Action

Wall Street Journal 12/02/2010

'Contagion' and Other Euro Myths

Wall Street Journal 12/02/2010

The Default option in the Irish banking crisis.

11/23/2010

The option of default or a solution that involves a haircut for bondholders, for Ireland or other euro-countries facing debt crisis.

Grouped Articles

Amid Irish Aid, a New Option

Wall Street Journal 11/23/2010

'Contagion' and Other Euro Myths

Wall Street Journal 12/02/2010

European banks: The last idealists

Economist 12/11/2010

Ireland's Not-So-Grand Bargain Options

Wall Street Journal 02/25/2011

Ireland's Bonds Downgraded to Junk

Wall Street Journal 07/13/2011

Plan for Greece Favors Creditors

New York Times 07/25/2011

A Brady Plan type solution for the debt crises in Greece, Ireland, Portugal and other EU countries.

05/18/2010

Grouped Articles

EU Dismisses IMF's Criticism On Greek Bailout

Wall Street Journal 06/07/2013

Personalities Clashing Over How to Handle New Greek Bailout

New York Times 07/23/2015

Nervous Europe Trying to Halt Economic Crisis

New York Times 11/30/2010

Europe's Central Banker Seeks Deeper Fiscal Union

Wall Street Journal 06/03/2011

'Contagion' and Other Euro Myths

Wall Street Journal 12/02/2010

Greek Myths and the Euro Tragedy

Wall Street Journal 05/18/2010


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