Thursday, November 17, 2011

European Crisis - No Way Out

PM Lee, at the recent G20 summit in Cannes, urged European leaders to adopt policies conducive to growth as a long-term solution to the sovereign debt crisis there.  My guess is that he was being polite and needed to say something encouraging after Singapore had been invited as an observer.

The fact of the matter is that there is no way out of the Eurozone debt crisis.  This has been a problem 40-years or more in the making.  Furthermore, based on traditional economics, the fact of Europe's aging population argues against any possibility of economic growth as a viable option for dealing with the debt problem.  When we add to this the fact of energy dependence and racial issues there, the lack of a realistic solution becomes crystal clear.

Now the only question is when the thing will blow up global stock markets, which appear to have been successful in pretending that the problem has a solution, thus far.  It has often been said that the stock market is for kids, and that the real adults play in the bond market.  I guess that must be true given the divergence in these 2 key markets.

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