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Comment is free The ailing euro is part of a wider crisis. Our capitalist system is near meltdown

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nadinbrzezinski Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-17-11 10:20 PM
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Comment is free The ailing euro is part of a wider crisis. Our capitalist system is near meltdown
Eighty years ago, faced with today's economic events, nobody would have been in any doubt: we would obviously be living through a crisis in capitalism. Instead, there is a collective unwillingness to call a spade a spade. This is variously a crisis of the European Union, a crisis of the euro, a debt crisis or a crisis of political will. It is all those things, but they are subplots of a much bigger story: the way capitalism has been conceived and practised for the last 30 years has hit the buffers. Unless and until that is recognised, western economies will be locked in stagnation which could even transmute into a major economic disaster.

Simply put, the world has trillions upon trillions of excessive private debt financed by too many different currencies whose risk is allegedly mitigated by even more trillions of financial bets which in aggregate do not minimise the systemic risk one iota. This entire financial edifice, underwritten by tiny amounts of capital, has been created over three decades backed by the theory that markets do not make mistakes. Capitalism is best conceived and practised, runs the theory, by hunter-gatherer bankers and entrepreneurs owing no allegiance to the state or society.

This is nonsense. Business and the state co-generate wealth in a system of complex mutual dependence. Markets are beset by mood swings and uncertainty which, if not offset by government action, lead to violent oscillations. Capitalism without responsibility or proportionality degrades into racketeering and exploitation. The prospect of limitless pay is an open invitation to bad, or even criminal, behaviour. Good capitalism cannot happen without referees to blow the whistle or robust frameworks in which markets can function; neither is reliably created by capitalism itself, hence the role of democratic government. Yet the world is trying to solve the legacy of the last 30 years as if none of this were true and, instead, that the practice and theories that created the mess are still valid.

US treasury secretary Tim Geithner, joining EU finance ministers in Poland as again they pondered how best to end the ongoing euro crisis, was at least recognising today's interdependencies between countries when he urged his fellow ministers to stop bickering because the markets were terrified by the threat of a catastrophic event – with all the risk that posed the US.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/sep/18/euro-crisis-recession-europe

:popcorn:
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Me. Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-17-11 10:36 PM
Response to Original message
1. Yea Gods
Geithner as the voice of reason. Or maybe he's just scared to death. I will never understand how how he, or Summers, after he bankrupted the Harvard endowment, became the president's go to men.
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nadinbrzezinski Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-17-11 10:37 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Connections
Not just a kick ass program

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connections_(TV_series)
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dkf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-17-11 11:20 PM
Response to Original message
3. The problem is that we are unwilling to accept the corrections of excess in the system.
Edited on Sat Sep-17-11 11:21 PM by dkf
Government is dependent on a certain level of economic activity for taxes and to satisfy constituents. Therefore we cannot allow capitalism to function as it is supposed to as capitalism includes pain for those who took excessive risks with wider implications for everyone.
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