Following is the unofficial transcript of a FIRST ON CNBC interview with George Soros, Chairman of Soros Fund Management, from the World Economic Forum in Davos. All references must be sourced to CNBC.
The article provides a data-rich analysis of how a banking crisis has morphed into a sovereign debt crisis as the authorities have refused to impose losses on investors in banks in the so-called core Eurozone countries. And as Rosner argues, the current path of denial and delay has increased the eventual costs to Germany and the global economy, with the tab to Germany already €500 billion higher than it would otherwise have been.
ECB president Mario Draghi, however, has outdone himself. Even prior to candidate president François Hollande’s official proposal of a “Growth Compact”, the ECB president took over the initiative by offering his own version to the European Parliament. As could be expected, the ECB’s version of such a “Growth Compact” is based on the idea of structural labour market reforms, thereby making explicit reference to the German Hartz reforms.
En Allemagne comme en Europe, par peur ou égoisme, les électeurs aisés ou âgés préfèrent refuser les investissements socialisés dans l'avenir au profit d'une accumulation financière et d'une obsession monétaire qui visent à assurer l'avenir des retraités et de leurs héritiers.
S&P’s downgrade of a bunch of European sovereigns was no surprise. What was somewhat surprising — and which went unmentioned in almost all the news stories I’ve read — was why S&P has gotten so pessimistic. (Paul Krugman)
Le Monde.fr - Pour le prix Nobel d’économie, le pouvoir non démocratique des financiers et des agences de notation impose à la Grèce ou au Portugal des politiques de rigueur à l'efficacité incertaine et même dangereuse
Pour avoir sauvé les banques sans avoir imposé la moindre réforme, la Banque centrale européenne et les responsables politiques se trouvent pris au piège de leurs choix. Une fois de plus, le système bancaire a la priorité sur les citoyens européens.