"To some people, the European Central Bank (E.C.B. ) seems like a fire department that is letting the house burn down to teach the children not to play with matches."
So wrote
Jack Ewing in the New York Times last week.
He went on:
"The E.C.B. has a fire hose ~ its ability to print money. But the bank is refusing to train it on the euro zone's debt crisis.
"The flames climbed higher Friday after the Italian Treasury had to pay an interest rate of 6.5 percent on a new issue of six-month bills . . . the highest interest rate Italy has had to pay to sell such debt since August 1997 . . . .
"But there is no sign the E.C.B. plans a major response, like buying large quantities of the country's bonds to bring down its borrowing costs."
"The ECB has long worried that buying government bonds in big enough amounts to bring down countries' borrowing costs would make it easier for national politicians to delay the budget austerity and economic overhauls that are needed."
As with the manufactured
debt ceiling crisis in the United States, the E.C.B. is withholding relief in
order to extort austerity measures from member governments ~ and the threat seems
to be working.
The same authors write:
"Euro-zone leaders are negotiating a potentially groundbreaking fiscal pact . . . [that] would make budget discipline legally binding and enforceable by European authorities. . . . European officials hope a new agreement, which would aim to shrink the excessive public debt that helped spark the crisis, would persuade the European Central Bank to undertake more drastic action to reverse the recent selloff in euro-zone debt markets."
The
Eurozone appears to be in the process of being "structurally readjusted" ~ the same
process imposed earlier by the IMF on Third World countries.
Structural demands routinely include harsh austerity measures, government cutbacks, privatization, and the disempowerment of national central banks, so that there is no national entity capable of creating and controlling the money supply on behalf of the people.
The latter result has officially been achieved
in the Eurozone, which is now dependent on the E.C.B. as the sole lender of
last resort and printer of new euros.
THE ECB SERVES BANKS NOT GOVERNMENTS
The legal justification for the E.C.B.'s
inaction in the sovereign debt crisis is Article 123
of the Lisbon Treaty, signed by EU members in 2007. As Jens Eidmann,
President of the Bundesbank and a member of the E.C.B. Governing
Council, stated in a November 14 interview :
"The eurosystem is a lender of last resort for solvent but illiquid banks. It must not be a lender of last resort for sovereigns because this would violate Article 123 of the EU treaty."
The language of Article 123 is rather obscure,
but basically it says that
the European central bank is the lender of
last resort for banks, not for governments.
It provides:
"1. Overdraft facilities or any other type of credit facility with the European Central Bank or with the central banks of the Member States (hereinafter referred to as "national central banks') in favour of Union institutions, bodies, offices or agencies, central governments, regional, local or other public authorities, other bodies governed by public law, or public undertakings of Member States shall be prohibited, as shall the purchase directly from them by the European Central Bank or national central banks of debt instruments.Banks can borrow from the E.C.B. at 1.25%, the minimum rate available for banks. Member governments, on the other hand, must put themselves at the mercy of the markets, which can squeeze them for "whatever the market will bear" ~ In Italy's case, 6.5%.
" 2. Paragraph 1 shall not apply to publicly owned credit institutions which, in the context of the supply of reserves by central banks, shall be given the same treatment by national central banks and the European Central Bank as private credit institutions."
THE REAL REASON EUROZONE COUNTRIES
ARE DROWNING IN DEBT
Why
should banks be able to borrow at 1.25% from the E.C.B.'s unlimited fountain of
euros, while the tap is closed for governments?
The conventional argument is that for governments to borrow money
created by their own central banks would be "inflationary." But private banks create the money they lend just
as government-owned central banks do.
Private
banks issue money in the form of "bank credit" on their books, and they often do
this before they have the liquidity
to back the loans. Then they borrow from
wherever they can get funds most cheaply.
When banks borrow from the E.C.B. as lender of last resort, the E.C.B. "prints
money" just as it would if it were lending to governments directly.
The
burgeoning debts of the Eurozone countries are being blamed on their large welfare
states, but these social systems were set up before the 1970s, when European governments
had very little national debt.
Their national debts shot up,
not because they spent on social services
but because they switched bankers.
Before the 1970s, European
governments borrowed from their own central banks. The money was effectively interest-free, since
they owned the banks and got the profits back as dividends.
After the European Monetary Union was established,
member countries had to borrow from private banks at interest ~ often substantial
interest.
And
the result?
Interest totals for Eurozone
countries are not readily accessible; but for France, at least, the total
sum paid in interest since the 1970s appears to be as great as the French federal
debt itself.
That means that if the French government had been borrowing from its central bank all along, it could have been debt-free today.
The
figures are nearly
as bad for Canada,
and they may actually be worse for the United
States.
The Federal Reserve's website lists
the sums paid in interest on
the U.S. federal debt for the last 24 years. During that period, taxpayers paid a total of
$8.2 trillion in interest. That's more than half the total $15 trillion
debt, in just 24 years.
The U.S. federal
debt has not been paid off since 1835, so taxpayers could well have paid more than $15 trillion by now in interest.
That means our entire federal debt could have been avoided if we had been borrowing from our own government-owned central bank all along, effectively interest-free.
And that is probably true for other countries
as well.
To avoid an overwhelming national debt and the forced austerity measures destined to follow, the Eurozone's citizens need to get the fire hose of money creation out of the hands of private banks and back into the hands of the people.
But how?
GOVERNMENTS CANNOT BORROW FROM THE ECB
BUT GOVERNMENT-OWNED BANKS CAN
Interestingly, Paragraph 2 of Article 123 of the Lisbon
Treaty carves out an exception to the rule that governments cannot borrow from
the E.C.B.
It says that government-owned banks can borrow on the
same terms as privately-owned banks. Many Eurozone countries have
publicly-owned banks; and as nationalization
of insolvent banks looms, they could soon find themselves with many more.
One solution
might be for the publicly-owned banks of Eurozone governments to exercise their
right to borrow from the E.C.B. at 1.25%, then use that liquidity to buy up the
country's debt, or as much of it as does not sell at auction.
The Federal Reserve does this routinely in open
market operations in the U.S.
The government's securities would be stabilized,
keeping speculators at bay; and the government would get the interest spread,
since it would own the banks and would get the profits back as dividends.
TAKING A STAND IN THE CLASS WAR
In
a November 25th article titled "Goldman
Sachs Has Taken Over," Paul Craig Roberts writes:
"The European Union, just like everything else, is merely another scheme to concentrate wealth in a few hands at the expense of European citizens, who are destined, like Americans, to be the serfs of the 21st century."
He
observes that Mario Draghi, the new president of the European Central Bank, was
Vice Chairman and Managing Director of Goldman Sachs International, a member of
Goldman Sachs' Management Committee, a member of the governing council of the
European Central Bank, a member of the board of directors of the Bank for
International Settlements, and Chairman of the Financial Stability Board .
Italy's
new prime minister Mario Monti, who was appointed rather than elected, was a
member of Goldman Sachs' Board of International Advisers, European Chairman of
the Trilateral Commission ("a US organization that advances American hegemony
over the world"), and a member of the Bilderberg group.
And Lucas Papademos, an unelected banker who
was installed as prime minister of Greece, was Vice President of the European
Central Bank and a member of America's Trilateral Commission.
Roberts
points to the suspicious fact that the German government was unable to sell 35%
of its 10-year bonds at its last auction; yet Germany's economy is in far
better shape than that of Italy, which managed to sell all its bonds. Why?
Roberts suspects an orchestrated scheme to pressure Germany to back off
from its demands to make the banks pay a share of their bailout.
Europe is in the process of being "structurally
readjusted" by a private banking cartel.
If its people are to resist this silent conquest, they need to rise
up and, using the ballot box and public banks, throw out the new banking
hegemony before it is too late.
Postscript, November 30:
The
Euro and the stock market rallied today on the news that the Federal Reserve and five other central banks had
agreed to lower the cost of emergency dollar funding for European banks. But what does it really mean? As noted
on the CNBC website:
In essence, the US central bank, or Federal Reserve, agreed
to provide cheaper dollar funding to the European Central Bank ~ which can then
provide cheaper dollar loans to cash-strapped European banks. . . .
The participation of the central banks of Canada, England,
Japan and Switzerland is more of an effort to show that all the central bankers
are working together than any expectation that there will be lots of dollar
borrowings under their facility.
It was good news for the banks,
but again it didn't do anything for EU governments. To participate in the benefits showered on
banks, they need to have some public banks that qualify for this largesse.
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