Wednesday, September 14, 2011

BRICs Mulls Bailout of the Eurozone

From the Reuters,

BRIC major emerging markets are considering ramping up holdings of euro-denominated bonds in a bid to help European countries mired in a sovereign debt crisis, newspaper Valor Economico reported on Tuesday, citing a monetary official.

Valor reported a decision could be made at a Sept. 22 meeting of finance ministers and central bank presidents from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa in Washington.

Brazil's central bank declined to comment on the story.

This comes on the heels of China’s proposed investment on Italy, yesterday.

From Bloomberg/Businessweek, (bold emphasis mine)

China’s status as the fastest- growing major economy and holder of the largest foreign-exchange reserves lured another bailout candidate as Italy struggles to avoid a collapse in investor confidence.

Italian officials held talks in the past few weeks with Chinese counterparts about potential investments in the country, an Italian government official said yesterday, adding that bonds weren’t the focus. Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti met with Chinese officials in Rome earlier this month, his spokesman Filippo Pepe said by phone today, declining to say exactly when the talks took place or what was discussed.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu, asked about buying Italian assets, said Europe is one of China’s main investment destinations, without specifically mentioning Italy.

Italy joins Spain, Greece, Portugal and investment bank Morgan Stanley among distressed borrowers that turned to China since the 2007 collapse in U.S. mortgage securities set off a crisis that widened to engulf euro-region sovereign debtors. Stocks rose on the potential Chinese investment in Italy even as previous commitments failed to have a lasting impact…

Any Chinese purchases of euro-region debt to date haven’t produced a lasting cut in yield premiums for Greece, Portugal or Spain…

Any Chinese purchases of euro-denominated debt may help it diversify its reserves away from dollars. The biggest foreign owner of U.S. government debt has doubled its holdings of Treasuries in the three years through June to about $1.17 trillion.

China is playing a “white knight” role in assisting Europe and buying itself goodwill that will enable it to purchase more sensitive European assets such as technology companies, according to Stamford, Connecticut-based Faros Trading in a June report. The European Union still has an arms embargo on China, imposed after the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989.

My comments:

1. The above exhibits the bailout mentality prevalent among policymakers. It’s easy to spend money or resources that aren’t theirs, since the costs of the ensuing political actions are distributed or externalized or borne by taxpayers. Policymakers are essentially unaccountable for their actions.

2. This also demonstrates the implicit desire of global governments to preserve the status quo, again at the expense of local taxpayers.

3. The transfer of resources from productive to non productive entities will have temporary palliative effects. Over the long term, this weakens the productive capability of productive enterprises, as well as, heightens the risk environment of the global economic and financial system. Besides, such transfers distort price signals and resource distribution in the marketplace which only increases systemic fragility.

And since we are dealing with non-productive entities, i.e. governments, for BRIC political leaders, the above represents a choice between domestic or international ‘political’ expenditures.

Again go back to #1.

4. BRIC governments will be a part of the consortium that will rescue elite bankers of the Eurozone and the US. This only reveals how widespread the welfare government-banking-central banking cartel is.

5. For China, part of the incentive to conduct a bail out is to project her growing geopolitical influence; yet a very expensive way to signal success.

China will also use this opportunity to squeeze political deals with economic repercussions. Like any political concession, these would likely benefit the client cronies and the political patrons of the incumbent Chinese government.

6. Diversification of currency reserves out of the US dollars has been attributed as one of the motives for the rescue. But why the Euro, whom like the US suffers from the almost the same disease?

Notice that the current developments signifies as a continuing crisis since 2008. Despite repeated trillions of US dollars or Euro spent on a seemingly expanding breadth of bailouts, there are hardly any convincing signs that this crisis will be over anytime soon. Much of the present political actions have been meant to 'kick the can down the road', which means the likelihood of even larger crisis ahead.

None of the above shows that the BRIC's rescue will matter. Again the thumbprints gleaned from the above would likely be more inflationism.

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