“There is a God for everything!
Everything!”
Plutus, the Greek god of wealth,
did not have an easy life. As the myth goes, Plutus wanted to grant riches only
to the "the just, the wise, the men of ordered life." Zeus blinded
him out of jealousy of mankind (and envy of the good), leaving Plutus to indiscriminately
distribute his favours.
Thursday,
June 30, 2011
Defying The
Gods or I.M.F.: Argentina , Iceland & Greece .
The Yangtze River is
rising. Man is on the roof. A traditional pigskin boat rowed along: let me get
you off.
“No, Buddha will protect.”
Man is now knee-high in water. Naval
boat came along: old man, let’s get you off.
“No, Buddha will protect.”
Man is now up to his neck in water.
Rescue helicopter came along: let’s winch you off, stubborn old man.
“No, Buddha will protect.”
Man died and saw Buddha. “Why didn’t you
come when I needed you most?”
I did, I sent pigskin boat, Naval boat
and even my best helicopter, but you refused!
So first
the Gods sent in Antigone:
So Antigone had a part in this
tragedy too. That's Antigone Loudiadis of Goldman Sachs, who arranged a
complex currency swap deal that helped Greece to
conceal the scale of its debt, in what the Financial Times delicately calls
"an
optical illusion", as the country snuck into the eurozone.
Then God showed how it could be done
in Argentina :
defy the I.M.F.
When
the Argentine economy collapsed in December 2001, doomsday predictions
abounded. Unless it adopted orthodox economic policies and quickly cut a deal
with its foreign creditors, hyperinflation would surely follow, the peso would
become worthless, investment and foreign reserves would vanish and any prospect
of growth would be strangled.
But
three years after Argentina declared
a record debt default of more than $100 billion, the largest in history, the
apocalypse has not arrived. Instead, the economy has grown by 8 percent for two
consecutive years, exports have zoomed, the currency is stable, investors are
gradually returning and unemployment has eased from record highs - all without
a debt settlement or the standard measures required by the International
Monetary Fund for its approval.
He even took out the head of I.M.F. just to be on the safe side.
Then came Iceland:
Unlike other disaster economies
around the European periphery – economies that are trying to rehabilitate
themselves through austerity and deflation — Iceland built
up so much debt and found itself in such dire straits that orthodoxy was out of
the question. Instead, Iceland devalued
its currency massively and imposed capital controls.
And a strange thing has happened:
although Iceland is
generally considered to have experienced the worst financial crisis in history,
its punishment has actually been substantially less than that of other nations.
For good measure Iceland ’s
god huffed and puffed.
Plutus, the Greek god of wealth, did not have an easy life. As the myth goes, Plutus wanted to grant riches only to the "the just, the wise, the men of ordered life." Zeus blinded him out of jealousy of mankind (and envy of the good), leaving Plutus to indiscriminately distribute his favours.
But no, the Greeks have not learned anything.
This was written last year:
The Greeks will do well to go back to their own Gods and not the I.M.F.
Michael Lewis: The Big Short
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