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Wednesday July 28, 2010
1:44pm
From:
Do The Latest European Bank Lending Numbers Reveal A Major Headache Looming For The ECB?
According to Ralph Atkins, writing in the Financial Times:

"Eurozone mortgage borrowing grew last month at the fastest pace in almost two years in a sign that bank lending across the 16-country region may be flickering back to life. Lending for house purchases rose at an annual rate of 3.4 per cent in June – the fastest since September 2008, according to European Central Bank data published on Tuesday. The acceleration pointed to a revival in consumer confidence and an increased willingness by banks to fuel the economic recovery with loans to the private sector."


So is this really the good news it seems to be? Well the answer is (as usual) yes and no. The problem is that behind the positive aggregate data lie the individual national details (you know, the place where the devil is usually.....
Tuesday July 27, 2010
2:07pm
From:
Stressing the European Stress Tests
Guest Post by Jordi Molins Coronado


The stress tests corresponding to the European financial system have been already published by CEBS. The total recapitalization needs for the whole 91 banks included in the tests, accounting approximately two thirds of the European financial system, is about €3.5bn.

I urge the reader to read again the last statement. Yes, €3.5bn. Not €35bn or €350bn. To put figures into perspective, €3.5bn is the bonus pool of a few big European banks.

Can anybody believe that with an additional recapitalization of €3.5bn, the European financial system would be sound again? That the blockade we have had in the wholesale and money markets could have been avoided by a recapitalization of €3.5bn?

One cannot say the calculations performed by the CEBS, with the support of the ECB.....
Sunday July 25, 2010
11:11am
From:
Under Stress
After a long and rather tense wait, the initial response to the publication of the European bank stress tests was always going to be something of an anti-climax. Indeed the results should hardly have comes as a surprise to anyone It is hardly breaking news to learn that a number of Spanish cajas will find themselves badly undercapitalised if the economic recovery – as surely might be expected – fails to materialise as planned. For the rest, the outcome is really a victory for politically correct: thinking. The situation, we learn, is slightly more serious than previously acknowleged, but we are a long way from seeing the imminent collapse of the European financial system. How could we be, when we have the friendly face of the ECB, always there ready to offer a helping hand.

The problem with the tests, is what.....
Tuesday July 20, 2010
4:10pm
From:
The Social Impacts of the Economic Slowdown: The Latvian experience
Guest Post by Eliana Marino

The economic and financial crisis that started in 2008 seems to be on its way to being overcome by many EU member states, but the population in some of the most touched countries is still labouring under the ongoing effects of the slowdown. Latvia, which underwent an annualised decline of 18% of GDP in the first quarter of 2009 and still has the highest unemployment rate in the EU, is experiencing a veritable revolution in its population structure and is preparing to face serious demographic challenges.

The strong recession experienced in the last few years has sadly confirmed the high propensity of Latvian people to migrate for economic reasons and generated a real “exodus” of working age population.
.....
4:05pm
From:
Latvia: Living in the Land of Extremes
Guest Post by Morten Hansen, Stockholm School of Economics in Riga

Here in Latvia the internal devaluation continues and the debate is whether the economy is flexible enough for this experiment. I say perhaps it is, Edward says perhaps it isn’t but one thing is for sure: the Latvian economy is (possibly perversely) indeed flexible.
I would like to illustrate this point with a series of numbers for the extremes that we have witnessed in Latvia so in the following I list a series of macroeconomic variables and the times at which they were at their extremes during the boom and during the current bust. After that I try a little discussion of why the
.....
3:58pm
From:
Japan's 2010 House of Councillors election: another "twisted Diet" coming up?
Guest Post by Manuel Alvarez RiveraElection Resources On The InternetWithout doubt, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) has had a decidedly rough ride in power in the ten months since its historic House of Representatives election victory, which brought to an end more than half-a-century of nearly uninterrupted Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) rule. Last month the Japanese public was treated to the
Saturday July 17, 2010
6:14am
From:
Chile's Economy - Steady as she Goes

By Claus Vistesen: Copenhagen

BBC's travel program Fast Track had a story (BBC) about how Santiago has been working hard since the earthquake to (re)build its position as a cool global city. I have never been to Santiago (let alone Chile) so I cannot say whether there is any position to rebuild or whether Santiago isn't simply moving up and ahead regardless of the recent blow to tourism in the wake of the earthquake. However, what I can say for certain is that when it comes to Chile's economy at large it is in no need to rebuild anything; it is both global, cool and very strong.


Enviable Economic Performance

Let us begin taking stock on the.....

Thursday July 15, 2010
3:54pm
From:
Japan's turn to China as a primary export market
Topics:China, Japan, USA
According to the Financial Times, "China replaced the US as Japan’s biggest export market last year(2009)".(1) Here's a chart from RIETI showing the relative shares of Japan's total exports:It's remarkable that the proportion of exports to the USA has practically halved in ten years. Figures from Japan's Ministry of Finance show that Japan actually had a trade deficit with China in 2009,
Wednesday July 14, 2010
12:29pm
From:
Oh It's All Gone Quiet Over In The Eurozone!
Or has it? According to Anchalee Worrachate in Bloomberg:

"A report from the Bank of Spain showed Spanish lenders borrowed a record 126.3 billion euros ($161 billion) from the ECB in June as investors shunned the nation’s banks. Spain’s banks increased borrowing 48 percent from 85.6 billion euros in May. That compares with a drop of 4 percent to 496.6 billion euros that the ECB provided lenders in the whole euro area. Spanish banks haven’t sold any bonds publicly in the past two months on concern the nation won’t be able to cut its deficit without hurting the economy."



Pretty hard to argue now the Spanish bank borrowing from the ECB is simply in line.....
4:55am
From:
Biting The Fiscal Bullet In Poland
There is a good deal of speculation in the press at the moment over the tricky issue of whether or not Poland will be able to comply with its agreed deficit-reduction deadline on the basis of the latest budget proposals announced by the government there. Personally, I tend to agree with those analysts who feel the spending and revenue assumptions being made by the Polish government are rather unrealistic, and that they will this be unable to comply with the terms of the Excess Deficit Procedure as laid down for them by the European Commission: difficult territory this in the "post Greek crisis" world, but it would not be the end of the world were the slippage to be justified. Unfortunately, as I will argue below, I don't think it is justified, indeed I think it is just the opposite of what sound economic.....
Monday July 12, 2010
5:06pm
From:
Is There Global Economic Slowdown In The Works?
by Edward Hugh: Barcelona

According to Ralph Atkins writing in the Financial Times last week, "the pace of Germany’s recovery is helping dispel fears of a “double dip” recession across the continent as a result of the crisis over public finances in southern European countries". Coincidentally, however, on the very same day, Alan Beattie writing from Washington informed us that the IMF feel "the risk of a slowdown in the global economic recovery has risen sharply". This left me asking myself which is it: is the global recovery a question of up up and away, or are we at the start of a renewed slowdown (whether or not you wish to term this a "double-dip")? So I thought I would take a look through some of the most recent data (both hard and soft) to see if.....
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Friday April 16, 2010
3:08pm Fri Apr 16
Edward. Last year you wrote a long article about a currency devaluation in the Baltics. But that just hasnt happened and according to Moodys Vice President, Kenneth Orchard “the prospect of a disorderly currency devaluation in Latvia was now “highly unlikely”. (Financial Times 31 Mar 2010). In fact, it does appear that the 'internal devaluations' ie, lower wages, seems to be working.

There is plenty of positive news flow coming out of Estonia now. The Estonian economy grew by 2.5% in Q4 of 2009. The highest growth within the EU. The number of registered unemployed fell for the the 3rd week running (BNS 16 Apr 2010). Estonia's monthly current acount surplus in February reached its highest level in 17 years helped by a growth in exports. YoY it grew 24%. (stat.ee).

The Ministry of Finance predicts GDP growth of +1% in 2010 and 4% in 2011 and peak at 4.2% in 2012.
GeorgeFComment about: Global Economy Matters
Wednesday March 10, 2010
9:08am Wed Mar 10
Germany's population is declining and that decline is accelerating sharply (down 0.3% in 2009). Surely the economy must continue to contract and talk of recovery is wishful thinking?
MichaelJonesComment about: Global Economy Matters
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