Grexit has never been from the table

TsiprasIn Gefira #0 we wrote that the Greek crisis was never solved. Greece is disconnected from the European banking system TARGET2, and capital control is still in place. Now Brussels is sealing off the border between Greece and Europe to stem the flow of refugees to the European heartland, severing Greece from the Schengen Area. It is not the question if the country will leave the euro but rather when it will start issuing the drachma. Tensions between Brussels, IMF, and Greece are increasing, implying a Grexit has become a contingency that one has to reckon with very seriously. A Grexit will strengthen the euro and increase its value against other currencies, as the euro bloc without Greece will become much stronger. That said, in the long run the euro has become a project that is crippling European economies. Continue reading

Europe has to resign from its pension systems

pension_qDemographic trends that are taking place are having an adverse effect on pension systems. Some experts are painting a black picture: pension systems will collapse. Others, especially those in the pay of the governments, assure us of their stability. We had better ask whether the economies of the countries concerned will support their pension systems because the ageing societies certainly will not.

Pension systems are not only about elderly people. They are constructed on the basis of a contract between generations or, to put it otherwise, on the concept of social solidarity: people who are currently economically active provide in the form of pensions for those who are not. That’s the first, the main pillar of the pension system, often referred to as the pay-as-you-go pension plan. Continue reading