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Monday, January 26, 2009
- "The mood is going to be somewhat sober" at the Davos World Economic Forum this year, which starts on Wednesday. No kidding. In that vein, the WEF's opening speaker is someone not known for his overwhelmingly upbeat rhetoric: Vladimir Putin.
- John Hempton at Bronte Capital thinks we should stop fiddling around with metaphors and literally drop money from helicopters to induce inflation fears. Sure some people may accidentally die from the falling money packages, says John, but it might also induce consumer spending. Or, you know, cause foreign investors to dump all their US assets.
- A good discussion over at Free Exchange over whether the euro-zone is a modern day gold bloc - referring to the rigid constraints of the interwar gold standard that delayed economic recovery in 1930s Europe and beyond. The short answer is no, it is not. The takeaways:
"...because the break-up of the eurozone would involve unacceptable financial damage, the ECB and member governments are committed to the rescue of flailing national economies. Europe cannot allow Ireland or Spain to collapse, and so presumably, international capital will treat those states differently than they might Britain, which is stuck out there by its lonesome."Moreover, the gold standard had no institutional equivalent of the ECB to help facilitate coordinated monetary easing - something that was a real sticking point. This doesn't mean the euro-zone is entirely in the clear, just that it has a set of challenges distinct from any historical precedent.
- Democracy woes from the pages of the WaPo: social unrest in Eastern Europe, and Bolivia's new constitution.
Labels: Davos, Euro, Monetary Policy