Τι πρεπει να γνωριζετε ( απ οσα λενε και δεν μαθαινετε … )

17:36 22/1/2012 - Πηγή: Olympia
Από τον Πόρτα – ΠόρταΟι κοκκοροι λαλουν

Εμεις δωσαμε το πιστολι στη Μερκελ – ΧΩΡΙΣ ΝΑ ΚΡΑΤΑΜΕ ΟΥΤΕ ΤΑ ΠΡΟΣΧΗΜΑΤΑ !

ΤΑ ΓΙΔΙΑ ειναι ΑΚΡΩΣ ΕΠΙΚΙΝΔΥΝΑ, ΑΔΙΑΒΑΣΤΑ, ΑΣΧΕΤΑ, και καθονται σε καρεκλες γυρισμενες αναποδα.. ( με τα 4 ποδια πανω ! )

1. Michael Fuchs, the deputy leader of Angela Merkel’s political party,

recently made the following statement: “I don’t think that Greece, in its current condition, can be saved.”

2. Moritz Kraemer, the head of S&P’s European sovereign ratings unit, made the following statement on Bloomberg Television on Monday: “Greece will default very shortly. Whether there will be a solution at the end of the current rocky negotiations I cannot say.”

3. One of the top officials at one of the top credit rating agencies in the world publicly declared on television that “Greece will default very shortly.”

4. This point was beautifully made in a recent article by John Mauldin….

So our problem country goes to its lenders and says, “We think you should share our pain. We are only going to pay you back 50% of what we owe you, and you must let us pay a 4% interest rate and pay you over a longer period. We think we can do that. Oh, and give us some more money in the meantime. And if you refuse, we won’t pay you anything and you will all have a banking crisis. Thanks for everything.”

The difficult is that if our problem country A gets to cut its debt by 50%, what about problem countries B, C, and D? Do they get the same deal? Why would voters in one country expect any less, if you agree to such terms for the first country?

5. The following comes from the New York Times….

Officials from the so-called troika of foreign lenders to Greece — the European Central Bank, European Union and International Monetary Fund — have come to believe that the country has neither the ability nor the will to carry out the broad economic reforms it has promised in exchange for aid, people familiar with the talks say, and they say they are even prepared to withhold the next installment of aid in March.

6. But the austerity measures that Greece has implemented so far have pushed the Greek economy into a full-blown depression.  Greece is experiencing a complete and total economic collapse at this point.  The following comes from the New York Times….

Greece’s dire economic condition can hardly be overstated. After two years of tax increases and wage cuts, Greek civil servants have seen their income shrink by 40 percent since 2010, and private-sector workers have suffered as well. More than $75 billion has left the country as people move their savings abroad. Some 68,000 businesses closed in 2010, and another 53,000 — out of 300,000 still active — are said to be close to bankruptcy, according to a report issued in the fall by the Greek Co-Federation of Chambers of Commerce.

“It’s an implosion — it’s an endless sequence of implosions from bad to worse, to worse, to worse,” said Yanis Va

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