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Greek crisis 101: How to make money off your debts

Greece's debt issues are unavoidable, even with the intervention of foreign governments.

By Bill Bonner, Guest blogger

The Dow down 97 points yesterday.

And the Greek story nears its conclusion鈥

The Germans agree to bail out the country鈥t least for a while鈥

鈥nd the Greeks agree to act more like Germans鈥t least while everyone is looking鈥

But now everybody agrees that the farce has gone on long enough.

Let鈥檚 recap:

The big banks lent the Greeks money. Then, the bankers paid themselves big bonuses, rewards for having booked so much business.

The Greeks spent it like they stole it鈥hich they practically did. With the help of Goldman Sachs, they rigged their accounts so as to appear to be better credit risks than they really were.

Then, of course, the Greeks could not repay. Since they gained independence from the Ottoman Turks in 1828, the Greeks never, ever repaid a loan as promised. Instead, they were in default about half the time.

But rather than let Mr. Market sort it out鈥s he had every other time, Mr. Government Fixer stepped in. He promised to manage the situation so that the careless lenders wouldn鈥檛 have to take the losses they deserved. How? By lending the borrower more money!

So, the Greeks were given more money鈥nd told to straighten up.

And the Greeks made an effort. Rather than spend money as freely as before, they cut back. Thousands of government employees were laid off, budgets trimmed鈥elts tightened.

This, naturally, led to an economic slump. GDP fell at a 5% rate in the 3rd quarter of last year. In the 4th quarter it was falling even faster, at a 7% annual rate. The New York Times reports:

As in Argentina 10 years ago, the Greek middle class is being hit hard. The upper classes are protected. They own stocks. They have bank accounts in foreign countries. And the lower classes had nothing before the crisis. They haven鈥檛 lost a penny.

But the middle classes lose jobs, income鈥nd benefits.

That is what is happening in America too. Middle class wealth, built up between 1980 and 2007, was largely an illusion. It was money borrowed from the future鈥 Now, it must be paid back.

And there鈥檚 not much Mr. Government Fixer can do about it. The problem is too much debt. Adding more debt doesn鈥檛 help.

鈥淏ut Bill, aren鈥檛 you being a little simplistic,鈥 asks a Dear Reader. 鈥淭he idea is not to add debt for its own sake. The idea is just to try to mediate the social consequences of private sector de-leveraging while giving the economy time to get back on its feet. Why won鈥檛 that work?鈥

Why won鈥檛 it work? We repeat the question to give us time to think鈥

鈥h yes鈥t won鈥檛 work because it ignores the reason the economy was knocked on its derriere in the first place. If the cause of the setback had been interest rates that were too high鈥r a natural disaster鈥he strategy might work. Just as an ancient Pharaoh made Bible fame by saving grain in the fat years and then releasing it when the harvests failed, so might a sage government today draw on its own surpluses to help soften the blow of a bad winter or an earthquake.

But the government has no surpluses. Only deficits. And you can鈥檛 mitigate the damage of an earthquake by setting off a nuclear explosion. Neither can you solve the problem of too much debt by adding to it.

When an economy has too much debt, there鈥檚 only one solution. Debt delenda est. Debt must be eliminated. It can be done in the old fashioned way 鈥 by Mr. Market. Or it can be done by Mr. Government Fixer.

Mr. Market will do it quickly鈥fficiently鈥nd brutally.

Mr. Government Fixer will hesitate鈥quivocate鈥acillate鈥revaricate鈥nd generally fornicate everything up. He will protect the guilty insiders鈥t the expense of the innocent taxpayers and general public. And in the end, he will let the debtor default, too, for he will have no other choice.

Bill Bonner
听蹿辞谤 The Daily Reckoning