eurozone crisis

March 17, 2018 | Author: Sazal Mahna | Category: Eurozone, Debt, European Debt Crisis, Bonds (Finance), Government Budget Balance


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    Home About Financial Crisis 2007-2009 Eurozone sovereign debt crisis Data sources Eurozone sovereign debt crisis The following page will present an analysis of the causes and consequences of the eurozone crisis. It will do so with regard to several potential causes and structural characteristics of the eurozone and some of its members most struck by the crisis. In particular the analysis will revolve around the cases of the so-called peripheral eurozone countries; Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Italy. I will cover the potential reasons why the peripheral eurozone economies suffered a particularly hard hit. The political responses and potential remedies to the eurozone crisis have been published in two previous posts. I expect the topic itself to continue for some time as the situation around eurozone currently carries the highest risk for another recession, and so will the page on the crisis be updated. Essentially the page is the summary of the analysis previously posted on the main page of the blog; the first one covering domestic instabilities, the second covering foreign instabilties, the third observing bank contagion and the collapse and the last one pondering the possible outcomes. I. Causes of the eurozone contagion In light of the expansionary austerity debate in peripheral Eurozone, the conventional solution surrounding Eurozone‟s recovery has been a call for fiscal adjustment. The idea supporting austerity arises from the viewpoint of recklessness of peripheral Eurozone governments and their extensive debt accumulation and crippling welfare states. Even though a certain level of fiscal profligacy and strong accumulation of debt were apparent in peripheral Eurozone (and it is certainly the main issue holding back its recovery), this was hardly the most important reason behind a strong and severe recession that struck these countries. The focus of the article will be on the spread of financial contagion onto the peripheral Eurozone economies, namely Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain. The problems that occurred for the peripheral Eurozone economies can be described through three features they all shared: domestic preconditions and instabilities, current account deficits and the euro, and outside contagion from the US. The first are local instabilities and the way these countries ran their economies in the wake of the crisis. This doesn‟t in all cases imply budget deficits and debt accumulation, rather each country was characterized by specific conditions which endangered the sustainability of their economies. Ireland and Spain experienced a housing and construction boom and suffered an immediate impact of deteriorating housing prices and loss of construction jobs. Before the crisis, their fiscal position was fine, with decreasing debt and a balanced budget, but after bank bailouts (Ireland) and bankruptcies of the largest construction companies (Spain), decreasing revenues and increasing expenditures increased their budget deficit and public debt beyond sustainable. Portugal had over-expenditures into large public projects (including building stadiums for the Euro 2004), mismanagement in public services and investment bubbles which all led to a rising public debt and an unsustainable fiscal position. Greece and Italy, both on very sensitive high public debt levels before the crisis (see Figure 2) had an additional constraint – corrupt politicians who cared more of self-preservation than the well-being of their country. Their politicians used expensive populist policies to remain in power. They used cheep borrowing on the international market to fund their electoral victories by broadening its welfare states and offering concessions to particular electoral groups. They „bought‟ votes by increasing pensions, hiring more public sector workers and increasing their wages in order to create a perception of high employment. Their governments were perfect examples of how the inflow of foreign capital was used inefficiently to finance consumption and maintain political power. The second characteristic was the introduction of the euro. Due to a common currency it became cheaper for the peripheral economies to borrow on the international market which induced large current account deficits. This was the point of a single currency – to ease the movement of capital across borders. But what it created was a dependency on credit from abroad. Once this credit flow stopped the stage was set for the spread of the crisis. They found themselves in a typical sudden credit stop (as explained in Reinhart and Rogoff, 2009), usually a characteristic of emerging economies that pegged their currencies. And third, what brought to the sudden stop of credit, worsening their fiscal balances, was the spread of outside contagion, particularly from the US. The financial crisis that started in the US quickly spread worldwide through decreasing trade and a loss of investor and consumer confidence causing a credit squeeze. All this made it harder for the peripheral economies to borrow on international markets, and since their economies became dependent on cheap capital from abroad to finance their consumption and government expenditures, the credit squeeze proved to be particularly painful. Outside but have nevertheless found themselves in similar structural problems. and weren't overheating as much. and created the final trigger for the sovereign debt crisis. the beginning of the 2000s was characterized as an excellent economic opportunity to all of them. They were borrowing cheep and used this money to live above their means. I. domestic instabilities Peripheral eurozone economies experienced particularly favourable economic conditions before the start of the crisis. Foreign instabilities vs. Only part of that story is true. Source: IMF Economic Outlook. So if high. The usual implication is domestic imbalances and fiscal profligacy. both in percentage of nominal GDP .1.contagion brought the domestic instabilities of the Eurozone economies onto the surface. For example. Portugal and Italy grew within their potential levels. After rough time in the 90-ies. something else was. Peripheral eurozone output gap. implying a clear sign of an overheating economy. September 2011 (note: data for 2012 are predictions) Some of them grew well beyond their potential levels of GDP. Greece managed to grow 8% above its potential GDP. a growth mostly fuelled by its rising debt and large capital inflows. but unlike Greece. The inflow of foreign capital fuelled the economies beyond what they were capable of. the driving forces of their high growth were the asset price booms in housing and construction. Figure 1. Figure 2 looks at each country's CA deficit (left axis) compared with gross government debt (right axis). Ireland and Spain experienced a similar output gap well beyond their potential level. above potential GDP growth wasn‟t a common characteristic. They are now the cause of problems of structural adjustments. Ireland and Italy all experienced CA surpluses at some point prior to the introduction of the euro. the question is where is the money from abroad being transferred to domestically? If it is used to finance investment (into manufacturing. but they couldn't have caused a crisis so severe and so widespread. Instabilities from abroad I. fails to give such strong implications.2.1. while Greece kept it steady. all peripheral economies experienced rising current account deficits. then the deficit can carry on rising as the country is using the inflow of capital to boost its production . fiscal profligacy isn‟t as crucial as often made to believe. Portugal. Observing Figure 2. Spain. It is more likely that outside contagion combined with dependence on foreign capital inflows exacerbated the systemic risk of each country.Figure 2. this implies it runs a surplus in its capital account. A capital account surplus means an inflow of foreign capital into a country (foreigners buying more domestic assets) which is essentially a good thing since money will always flow to where it expects the highest and safest returns. on the other hand. and mostly since the introduction of the euro.2. both in percentage of nominal GDP. Domestic imbalances became more visible once the foreign inflow of credit stopped. CA balance (left axis. Even though Greece didn't have a CA surplus for over 30 years. Spain. Note: All data for 2012 are estimates. It wasn‟t until the actual start of the crisis that the debt levels started rising in every country. a common feature is obvious: right before the start of the crisis. I. blue) compared with gross government debt (right axis. but they weren‟t the cause of the contagion itself. September 2011. Therefore. However. red). Italy and Ireland were actually decreasing their government debts and improving their fiscal positions. Problems with a CA deficit and the common currency When one country runs a current account deficit. only to see them decrease rapidly from the beginning of the decade. while the same period saw a large CA surplus in Germany. Source of data: IMF World Economic Outlook. productivity increase or any other wealth creating activity) instead of consumption. Government debt increase. Some instabilities certainly did exist. Before the euro Greece had a history of debt defaults. every peripheral Eurozone bond on the market traded as the German Bund – thespreads were smaller (see graph below) and the risks were perceived as non-existent (Basel II recognized their debt as zero risk-weighted assets). inflation crises and banking crises (see Reinhart and Roggof. Spain and to some extent the US suffered from the first. However. 2009). Soon enough. If it is used to finance consumption and government expenditures focused on politically popular policies. The reasoning behind it was that the ECB would make sure inflation and currency instability will never again be the problem of Greece or any other peripheral country.facilities and increase growth. . while Greece. Portugal and Italy suffered from the former. then the outcome might be an asset price boom or an unsustainable fiscal position of the government who is becoming dependent on foreign capital to finance its exaggerated expenditures. The spread between Greek and German bonds was historically always high. This was usually reflected in its higher bond yields – a risk premium for investing in its debt. its yields and the spread started decreasing making the Greek debt as safe an investment (financially) as the German debt. once the euro was introduced. financial contagion. Ireland. Figure 3. 1991-2011. Yield spreads over the German Bund. Source: FT Aplhaville . when a lot of German capital flew across borders. Borrowing cheaply meant that credit from abroad was used to fuel domestic consumption which led to a rapid increase in GDP above its potential levels. Spain). while in Ireland they grew simultaneously with consumption. all these countries could borrow at cheap rates. either through high government spending (Greece. February 2012.This meant one thing. Greece and Portugal saw steadily increasing consumption. For all the countries government expenditures were closing the gap between investments. It compares levels of consumption.the same effect can be noticed in Spain. they grew rapidly. Figure 4. doubling in absolute terms over the past decade. . Figure 4 observes how the inflow of capital was used in peripheral Eurozone. In Germany. Source of data: St. Louis Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Portugal) or housing market booms (Ireland. fixed capital formation (red) and consumption (right axis. In Spain they grew simultaneously with investments. fixed investments have deteriorated immediately since the introduction of the euro. In Italy and Ireland they grew simultaneously right about two years before the crisis until the housing prices started to fall . From the graphs it can be inferred that in all these countries. while Portugal experienced a significant decrease of the gap between investments and government expenditures after the introduction of the euro. except Italy. In Greece. Government expenditures also show a rising trend for each country (represented by the blue line). green) are all taken as log variables. with investments being more cyclical and volatile. Government expenditure (blue). consumption was growing much faster and more stable than fixed capital formation. while its politicians had no need to be fiscally responsible and could resort to populist policies that would keep them in power. government expenditures and gross fixed capital formation (fixed investments) for each nation observed to evaluate the sustainability of the CA deficit. since they were no longer able to issue debt in their own currency. However. I. Essentially the idea of the euro was to increase and smoothen convergence in the Eurozone.1. rather than investments. Summary of outside contagion Interest rates were low across the Eurozone. It indeed helped fuel and sustain economic growth way above its potential level for some of these countries. Sustainability of debt . The system of borrowing to fuel domestic asset bubbles worked as long as the asset prices kept rising. Investors didn‟t react well to this. this was an anticipated reaction and a welcomed move from the Eurozone policymakers. It became more attractive to invest in the periphery as the risk of default was diminished by the fact that the euro was backed up by all Eurozone nations. Investor confidence rapidly declined worldwide and the peripheral Eurozone countries faced the same fate of the Latin American countries in the 90ies. Adoption of the euro made it easier for capital to flow into the peripheral countries. yet stable markets. Their CA deficits prove this.3. It was supposed to be used to make their economies more competitive. But consumption and government expenditures (and an asset price bubble in Ireland and Spain). The problem arose when the inflow of capital suddenly stopped due a spread of the US financial contagion across the globe. Capital outflows came mainly from the core as it became available for German and French investors to broaden their portfolio onto new.I. were fuelling growth creating dependency on foreign capital to service current liabilities. In Germany lack of domestic demand was substituted by investing abroad. Borrowers could pay off their loans simply by borrowing more even cheaper. and investors in core countries seized this opportunity to invest in periphery economies.3. An increase of systemic risk and asymmetric outside shocks that led to a stop of credit exacerbated the existing instabilities in peripheral Eurozone. The sudden stop in 2009 made it difficult for these countries to roll over their debts which increased the European crisis of confidence and led the peripheral economies into a sovereign debt crisis.  Weakening global growth will decrease commodity prices which will reduce export earnings to primary commodity producers – the emerging market countries. Portugal and Ireland (4 out of 5 countries analyzed) are countries with the highest debt burdens in the eurozone and are the countries most exposed to the threat of default. Eurozone government gross debt. Italy. making it even more difficult for them to service their debt  Banking crises in global financial centers will yield a credit squeeze on the international lending market. In addition to this I would like to stress out the mechanism of outside contagion described excelently by Reinhart and Rogoff (2009) (I summarize their main findings on the spread of contagion throughout the world financial system):  "Banking crises in advanced economies decrease growth of these economies. their economic activity will contract and the burden of the debt will be harder to service  Banking crises will decrease investor confidence and make them withdraw from risk taking and move their money into safe assets (such as low-yield government . Source: The Economist Figure 5 serves as a good reminder on importance of debt levels and the sustainability of these debt levels on investor confidence and country bond yields. This slowing of growth and economic activity will hit exports thus eliminating availability of hard currency to emerging market countries.Figure 5. making it more difficult for them to service their debts. Since it will become harder for the emerging market economies to obtain credit. Greece. and their economies contracted. minimizing costs of lending and maximizing their profits. they artificially increased demand for this asset. Rogoff (2009): "This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly" Princeton University Press There are striking similarities with the case of the eurozone economies. considered to be a zero risk asset was given a 20% risk-weight. as most . While the regulatory requirement on holding a corporate loan was 8%. This meant that if a bank was to lend to sovereigns instead of businesses it could make much more money (leverage on sovereign bonds was 62. it is what drives them forward. i. eurozone banks were buying the peripheral debt as part of their zero risk-weighted assets. The only difference is that they didn't depend on commodity prices to drive their exports.6% (sovereign debt.6% of capital requirement for sovereign bond holdings). By investing into sovereign debt they were doing just that. By recognizing Greek debt (for example) as a safe asset. The regulatory paradox is once again evident. How the banks got caught up buying peripheral debt? As was already noted in this blog. Companies are motivated by profits. their profitability. An artificial increase of demand resulted in too high exposure of EU banks to Greek debt. Now. emerging markets will find it much harder to borrow on the international market as the yields on their bonds will rise and they will become less attractive to investors. This created a huge incentive for the banks to increase profitability. the capital requirement for holding sovereign debt was just 1.4. it's usually only the IMF who comes to the rescue). Again. will always look for ways to increase its revenues and minimize its costs and risks. resulting in the total 1. the ECB or eventually the IMF (in the emerging markets case. but the credit squeeze and the dependence on credit from net lenders forced them into a situation where they were unable to service their debts anymore. It opened a whole new area of investment." Reinhart.5 to one). They were following the Basel accords whose initial idea was to make banks safer and more prudent. Banks.5 to one compared to leverage on business loans of only 12.securities). just like any other private business.e. due to a severe decrease in confidence they find it hard to borrow on international markets and are entering into an even higher dependency on foreign aid from either Germany. Accusing the bankers of being greedy based on their huge holdings of MBSs and/or peripheral sovereign debt can only be done by someone who doesn‟t understand the elementary principle of business economics (or microeconomics) – businesses use scarce resources to maximize their wealth. reducing their exposure to risks. it is what drives economic growth and it is what drives capitalism to succeed as a system. similar to what the recourse rule did for the mortgage market in the US. but through guiding their investments and creating new demand for assets they yielded the exact opposite result of what they were aiming at. which is the reason behind a particularly delicate situation regarding the Greek default. I. GDP growth in peripheral Eurozone economies. electoral winning policies. . What was the end outcome of an artificially created demand for peripheral debt? It made it easy for the governments of these countries to borrow to fund their populist. Figure 7. 2001-2011. Unemployment rate in peripheral Eurozone economies. The Basel accords only further endangered the fiscal positions of these countries and haven‟t worked at all towards decreasing the systemic risks for their banks. not the default itself that may prove to be the trigger for another depression. Higher debts in Italy and Greece were evident even before the crisis.private Greek debt holders are EU banks. The collapse Figure 6. It is their bancrupcy and/or nationalization. II. It worsened domestic fiscal balances of these countries and worked towards increasing their debt levels. 2001-2011. All this worked further in decreasing investor confidence regarding the eurozone situation and the result was even more short-selling of peripheral government debt and higher yields and spreads over the German Bund. . The construction and housing industries carried a lot of employment so when the building boom stopped and turned into a bust. guarantee on bank debts by the Irish government increased the Irish debt substantially and brought its own solvency into question. As stated previously they were running a real estate boom. triggered by the US financial crisis.Source: IMF. As wasshown previously. investors usually make the decision to buy government bonds based on whether the government will be capable to service its debt obligations and pay out interest. Paul Krugman recognizes the start of troubles for Spain and Ireland through a large fiscal deficit that arose due to a severe decrease of revenues since tax receipts were mostly depended on real estate transactions. the cases of Ireland and Spain were somewhat different. and a severe decrease of investor confidence. which led both Ireland and Spain from a budget surplus into a huge budget deficit. As was describedpreviously. The data for 2012 are estimates. to stay solvent in the future.e. However. In addition. The sudden credit stop was a result of a recession spreading from the US. as unemployment rose. London) yields a credit squeeze on the international market. In his text in the New York Times in January 2010. As a result emerging market economies and economies dependent on foreign lending to finance its consumption find it much harder to borrow on the international market and see their bond yields rise and their debt harder and harder to service. and suffered an immediate impact of deteriorating housing prices and loss of construction jobs. employment soared down in both countries (see the second figure and observe the rapid increase of unemployment for both these countries in particular). Fiscal deficits and rising public debts acted as a signal to investors to exit from eurozone peripheral debt and the yields started rising. i. the government debt levels of Spain and Ireland rose particularly high after the bubble burst on their housing markets. Even though the current account deficit proved to be the leading reason behind the countries respective bubbles. Furthermore. A stop of borrowing from the core eurozone countries such as Germany. so did the costs of unemployment benefits. Krugman adds. As soon as they see a rising fiscal deficit and more and more debt pilling up the probability of staying solvent decreases and the country's debt becomes a more risky investment. World Economic Outlook. a banking crisis in the centres of world finance (New York. September 2011. exposed the depended peripheral countries to the threat of default. much like the one in the US. This was an inevitable scenario for the eurozone peripheral countries. On the other hand. Investors don‟t believe that the issuer will be able to service its liabilities in the short run and the costs of borrowing rises. Higher bond yields (or spreads over the German bonds) simply reflect unsustainable public finances of its issuers. The governments failed to adopt necessary reforms and were thus removed from office. It wasn‟t the corruption or reckless behaviour. This is what happened to Ireland before its bonds were given a “junk” investment grade. while Spain held elections this Sunday and saw the victory of the conservatives announcing cuts and fiscal responsibility. Instead they lacked a proper soulution and were avoiding the necessary reforms afraid of losing popular support. As opposed to American companies eurozone companies are much more dependent on bank loans to fund their business (80% of EU companies compared to only 30% of US. No matter how much liquidity was being pumped in the system. III. And the very same bond markets are threatening future recovery and the existence of the eurozone and its currency. no one would use it to increase lending and businesses lost support. What were the outcomes? In the last year every peripheral eurozone government was kicked out of office. Portugal and Ireland changed governments earlier in the year. Italy has already jumped through that spread and Spain is close enough. The danger is higher and higher costs of borrowing and more illiquidity for these countries that will inevitably lead to their insolvency. The bond yield spreads in the eurozone have been relentless in punishing incompetent governments and they were right to do so. This implies higher costs for debt holders in the form of margin requirements (collateral payments made when bond prices fall) and could lead to a further cycle of higher and higher yields. It is obvious how a lending freeze and reluctance of banks to lend further due to their increased contagion from enforced exposure to peripheral debt resulted in severe consequences for the real eurozone economy. The real danger is when the bond yield spread rises above 500 basis points. Governments such as Italy‟s Silvio Berlusconi who managed to avoid being removed from office for a decade (apart from a brief 2 year period) has finally seen his political career finished. They were supposed to restore investor confidence and set a stage for economic growth. The markets reacted as they should have . it was the European bond markets that brought down the peripheral governments. The ECB refused to act as lender of last resort as it insists it cannot replace the governments in restoring investor confidence. Italy and Greece most recently gottechnocratic governments.via rising bond yields. and naturally the politicians needed to pay the price. according to the FT). .Loss of confidence further crippled any Keynesian solution of spurring big money into the economy. The political implication of the crisis was huge. Spain and France. The rise of bond yields in Italy. probably due to expectations of future instabilities. despite the technocratic government. though. The markets can only bear these to a certain extent. and investors are hence losing confidence. there were signs of decreasing growth. Italy is on a brink of another recession the former government drove them into. It shouldn‟t have come as a surprise. Rather than focusing on policies to restore growth and stick to a credible debt and deficit reduction strategy. described by white elephant projects and pork-barrel spending. Even though the data for October and November haven‟t been taken into account (months that showed largest instabilities).1. The inability of the politicians to reach a plausible conclusion on how to resolve the crisis of confidence in Europe is appalling. The more time it takes PM Monti to design a credible growth strategy and to resolve Italy‟s high corruption and public sector problems. When they devise a credible plan on how to reduce Italy‟s huge debt burden and how to restore economic growth. Source: Financial Times. Martin Wolf: "Thinking through the unthinkable" III. One can rightfully conclude that another recession is here. then Italy can finally see a decrease of its yields and easier financing. and this time the cause is political.Figure 8. The best proof is the signals after the Berlusconi exit in Italy – even though most of the politicians expected a stabilization on the debt market. and the lack of liquidity for German bonds is a natural reaction of the markets to political incompetence. which might take years. IV Concluding words on the eurozone debt crisis The eurozone debt crisis was triggered by misusing the welfare state to fund electoral victories by advocating populist policies under the idea of social justice. the politicians continuously choose temporary short-term fixes. Populism. Things are still too uncertain. Higher bond yields for Italian debt is an effect of no recovery. the harder will it be for them to borrow on the international markets. There is nothing the investors can think of that will make them feel safe. it surprised everyone by having Italian bond yields jump above the “unsustainable” 7% boundary. Double dip? According to the latest data on economic growth and forecasts of future growth the double dip recession has arrived. can never create . which might lead to hyperinflation – a strategy Germany strongly opposes. internal instabilities that used cheap borrowing to fund populist policies. Unlike the recession in 2008 triggered by Lehman. This was obvious three months ago and it is obvious now. Reply . However.to bring back its deutsche mark. during all this time no credible solution was proposed and the position of all these countries and the eurozone itself became unbearable. a US crisis that lead to a sudden credit stop which emphasised the domestic instabilities. and finally a regulatory system that steered banks' investments into sovereign debt which caused the threat of default to be far greater than it usually is. this one will be triggered by the severe loss of confidence in the bond markets caused by political incompetence. or we might see serial defaults of certain eurozone countries. Two solutions are available. and I think this is what Germany really wants. but what do you think will happen to the eurozone next? Is there a way out? I'm thinking that suborn politicians and the ECB will ultimately fail to provide any solution.. sajin29 November 2011 23:41 excellent stuff! thank you very much for such an in-depth analysis! it is really helpful Reply 2. The political economy implication in the eurozone debt crisis is huge. Michael Foster2 December 2011 14:33 nice sum-up. The causes lie within several factors. and get out of the whole "nation bailout" situation. and rightly so. Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to Facebook 4 comments: 1. Please see disclaimer. either the ECB enters the market a lender of last resort and monetizes debt. Copyright: Vuk Vukovic. It can only lead to an inevitable disaster and higher social injustice which can trigger social turmoil. large CA deficits due to the introduction of the euro and a misguided idea on how it was supposed to work.sustainable wealth. one shouldn't worry about it. If it at all resembles the European Commission. It will call on European collectivism and similar nonsense. But at this point. Merkel is calling for it for quite some time and she is reluctant to accept any solution (eurobonds. but if it went to overconsumption and overspending from the governments to finance political goals. which I'm sure it will. Vuk Vukovic2 December 2011 15:59 I'm not in a position to make credible predictions. than we should worry about the sustainability of their balance of payments position. I think we are ready to accept just about anything to keep the world out of another painful depression. And I agree.if it went to investment that led to a sustainable growth for the economy. I would be against it. John Turpin12 February 2012 14:38 Your analysis is spot on! the CA deficit financing is the whole point . printing money) other than a fiscal union where she might impose strict controls on reckless countries. On one hand I'm glad she's not caving into the pressure for calls on money printing (the idea for ECB as the lender of last resort to governments) and I'm glad she's eliminating the threat of hyperinflation. the credit crunch from the US only exposed this weak BoP position in peripheral Europe. I would say the next step is a fiscal union. SEARCH THIS BLOG Search FOLLOW BY EMAIL Submit . Reply Home Subscribe to: Posts (Atom) MY VIEW ON LIBERTY Any individual is free to interact in any social endeavour he or she finds desirable. up to the point when his or her actions constrain or limit the freedom of another individual. but I was. but on the other hand I'm not sure how this new fiscal union is supposed to look like. Reply 4.3. 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Today‟s post will be.. and h.temporary vs permanent income One of the main arguments in favour of a fiscal stimulus include the idea that tax rebates will work towards encouraging consumption...  Modern consumption theory .000 in December 2011...5% and an increase in nonfarm payroll s by 200.  Graph of the week: Big Mac Wages You've surely heard of the Big Mac Index – it‟s an interesting way to measure the plausibility of the law of one price.. Fed Says .. I've added a few things and broadened the analysi. NEW YORK TIMES NEWS FEED  Monti Fights to Reshape Italy in Shadow of Euro Crisis  Family Net Worth Drops to Level of Early ‟90s..Intermezzo Here's something to keep it interesting while waiting for the next few posts on consequences and the remedies of the eurozone crisis. Firstly I aim to demystify the rant over the 1% of the rich and..  Eurozone crisis . resulted in an. 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