Showing posts with label Silvio Berlusconi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silvio Berlusconi. Show all posts

29 April 2013

Week ending 26th April 2013


A year ago it looked as though the end game was in sight for the euro, then things quietened down.  The general view was that somehow the Eurozone would muddle its way through to a solution over time.  However the Eurozone reappeared last week in the business, economic and political sections of the media and it seems nothing much has changed or is likely to and the slide continues.

Mrs. Merkel mentions the war

Spain’s unemployment has continued to rise and hit a new record of 27% with 57% of under 25s out of work.  Italy has finally cobbled together a government which includes Silvio Berlusconi’s party so not much change there.
Stern Auntie Angela is once again pushing for stricter Europe-wide control over national budgets, still pursuing the idea that if only everyone could be more like the Germans then all would be well.  This is diametrically opposed to the French position that wants banking union or in other words if only everyone could be more like the French then …. Well you get the picture.
The ability of the Eurozone politicians to come up with policies and proposals that effectively cancel each other out is not altogether surprising if you look at European history.  Differences like this arose regularly sometimes leading to war which would sort it out one way or the other.  Now that option is not available (thankfully) but the Eurozone doesn’t seem to have found an alternative that works so the differences and the problems they cause rumble on.
Of course this is what the euro was supposed to be all about.  A common currency leading to “ever closer union” would be the mechanism by which all differences would be resolved.  Indeed Auntie Angela has warned sternly of the risk of a return to conflict between European countries if the euro fails.  However it is clear from a number of developments from last week that the pressure on the euro is building.

Austerity light

With GDP throughout the Eurozone falling and even the German economy feeling the pinch it seems everyone (apart from stern Auntie Angela) is questioning whether austerity has gone too far.  Almost any country that cares to ask is being granted an extension to deficit reduction targets.  The IMF came out with a strange argument that George Osborne was “playing with fire” by pursuing the current rate of deficit reduction in the UK and that there is the “fiscal space” in the UK to indulge in a bit of “fiscal loosening”.   The mood appears to be swinging towards the idea that some sort of “light touch” austerity is the answer because austerity itself has become the problem.
All this is a classic and big scale example of tackling symptoms rather than the core problem which is the euro itself.  In fact it’s worse than that.  When you tackle symptoms and this produces consequences you don’t much like this causes you to tackle these symptoms as well, so you get further and further away from the core problem.

No FTT no €30bn

An example of the Eurozone focusing on symptoms and not the problem is the attempt by Germany and 10 other countries to introduce a Financial Transactions Tax (FTT).  As the tax will apply to trades across the world if they originate in one of these 11 countries it is not surprising that many other countries including the US and UK are against it.  A Swedish minister has warned that it will be a disaster and will not work.  He should know as he actually introduced it in Sweden and found it was a disaster and didn’t work.
Last week Jens Weidman President of the Bundesbank no less announced that “From a monetary policy point of view, the FTT in its current form is to be viewed critically”.  He also warned that it could raise the costs of government borrowing and outweigh the revenues raised by the tax.  I think we can take that as a “nein”.
The only argument I have found in favour of the FTT is that it could raise up to €30bn which would be used to …lower government deficits!  Well perhaps, but if it raises borrowing costs then once again the EU will have cancelled itself out and long since lost sight of the real problem.
George Osborne has taken to matter to the European courts.  It would be rather good if he could get the European Court of Human Rights to rule against FTT.  Would be almost worth putting up with Abu Qatada to win that one.

Whatever it takes or whatever it costs?

One of the moves that kept the lid on the whole mess for a while was the European Central Bank (ECB) becoming in effect the lender of last resort in the Eurozone.  Last summer it launched its emergency rescue strategy, Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT), buying up the bonds of countries like Spain and Italy and bringing about a spectacular fall in their borrowing costs.  This followed Mario Draghi’s statement that he would do “whatever it takes” to deal with the Eurozone’s sovereign debt problems.
However he omitted to mention that his plan required the German taxpayer to “pay whatever it takes”.  Last week the Bundesbank having poo pooed the FTT did the same to OMT, taking it apart point by point.  Germany’s constitutional court is due to rule on the legality of OMT in June.  If it rules against OMT it pretty much means the end of the euro.  With stakes that high the markets seem confident the court will find some formula to avert that kind of crisis.  However it does show just how close run this is all getting.

Italian job

Now that we have a new Italian government perhaps we will see some action to stop the Italian economy choking to death.  However be careful what you wish for.  Strangely Italy is not fundamentally a basket case, its problem being lack of competitiveness brought about by letting its labour costs race 30pc ahead of Germany’s.  In particular it has a primary surplus of 2.5pc of GDP (something George Osborne can only dream about currently).  This means Italy could leave the EMU and regain competitiveness without facing a funding crisis.
So why doesn’t Italy do just that?  Mainly because its political leaders have not so far been prepared to play rough.  The latest PM Enrico Letta does not look like the man to change that and the government he now heads is unlikely to last long enough to achieve anything meaningful.  But even with a PM who was very nearly named after a cup of weak coffee, you never know.

Why does all this matter

You may be wondering why I am boring you all to death with this stuff.  Last week the UK GDP figures were published and apparently we managed a whole 0.3pc growth in the last quarter, avoiding the triple dip, which sounds more like the latest offer from KFC than a meaningful economic concept.  Also it was reported that many businesses are sitting on mountains of cash and are reluctant to invest and even more reluctant to borrow to invest.  Behind the flat economy and reluctance to invest is uncertainty and that uncertainty is all about what’s going to happen in the Eurozone.  Even when nothing does happen what might happen is scary enough to keep most CEs and FDs awake at night and holding on to their cash cushions.
So the crisis and the uncertainty are set to continue. The UK’s and indeed the world economy cannot recover properly until the EU faces up to the fact that the euro in its current form just cannot work.

So that was some of the week before this week. We hope you found some of the above thought provoking and useful for you and your business. We trust you had a good weekend and hope you have a great week this week.

17 December 2012

That was week ending 14th December 2012


This is the last TWb4TW until after the Christmas and New Year break. I started writing these articles in April and can hardly believe it is now nearly the end of the year and I am still writing them. I have been encouraged by the kind responses from you the people that read them and I thank you for those.
This week I thought it appropriate to produce my Christmas wish list, wishes for myself and others.  Here goes.

Cable not able

Last week Vince Cable took yet another swipe at big global companies that don’t pay enough or any UK tax. For Mr. Cable it is still the moral high ground that matters so no mention of our unfit for any purpose tax system. If the companies concerned are obeying the law then it is clearly the law that needs changing if it is not producing the result the country needs and that is the job of government.
Whilst Mr. Cable has done some good work at BIS underneath he is fundamentally anti business, or if isn’t he certainly sounds like it. I once heard him speak and claim that he was experienced in business because he had spent time as an economist at Shell. Anyone who knows anything about what economists do in organisations like Shell will know this doesn’t count as business experience.
So my Christmas wish for Mr. Cable is that he should get another job.  Minister for Overseas Development might suit his moralising better or perhaps being made to run an SME for a year might give him some “real” business experience.

It’s the economy stupid

Talking of experience my Christmas wish for George Osborne is that he too should find an opportunity to get some real experience. He is an example of yet another politician who is no doubt very intelligent but has done nothing but politics almost since he left primary school. This was demonstrated in the Autumn Statement and its aftermath where he was clearly more interested in scoring political points over Ed Balls than coming up with radical policies that would really get the economy moving. You can usually leave Ed Balls to score political points over himself, so why not get on with the job we pay you for, George because it really is the economy that matters and you are not stupid.

Does one more make a difference?

After the announcement that Canadian Mark Carney is to succeed Sir Mervyn King as Governor of the Bank of England last week we heard that Hector Sants was to join Barclays as head of compliance. Sants was previously Chief Executive at the FSA.
Now you can’t blame all the FSA’s failings on Sants. However he did step up to Chief Executive in time to rubber stamp RBS’ acquisition of ABN AMRO and he did publish just a 12 line press release on the FSA’s investigation into RBS, rather than publish the full report.
I understand that Barclays already have around 1800 compliance officers. So whilst Carney’s appointment does represent a new direction at the BoE you have to ask what real difference appointing a regulator to head up compliance will really make at Barclays.  My Christmas wish for Mr. Sants is good luck, but I have a feeling he will end up between a rock and a hard place with this one.

Train the trainers

The investigation into what went wrong at the DfT over the West Coast Mainline fiasco continues but with growing signs of avoidance tactics from anyone in the DfT who could possibly be blamed. My Christmas wish is that anyone at senior level in the DfT should be given a train set for Christmas and  required to assemble it in to a working model of the West Coast line in 30 minutes or be shown the door. Simple and effective.

HP used to work

I own an HP printer which I bought in the days when you could truly say buy HP because you just plug it in, turn it on and it works. What’s more my printer still does work, even though HP has had about 5 CEOs since I bought it. My Christmas wish for HP is that they should make me an offer for my old printer, with a suitable Autonomy sized premium and I would be delighted to sell it back to them. Then they could examine it and discover what it was that they used be really good at.

Oh no it's Silvio

You could not make it up; Silvio Berlusconi is running for Prime Minister of Italy again. This proves the view of a previous British ambassador to Italy who said “it is not difficult to govern the Italians, it is simply unnecessary”. Sr B’s first public pronouncement was to state “who cares about how much interest we pay to people who invest in our debt obligations compared to Germany”. This will be music to many Italian’s ears but maybe this time not enough of them will buy the message. So I wish Silvio Berlusconi everything he deserves.

So that was some of the week before this week. We hope you found some of the above thought provoking and useful for you and your business. TWb4TW will be back in the New Year so have a great Christmas and New Year holiday.