by Calculated Risk on 1/16/2012 09:24:00 AM
Monday, January 16, 2012
Herman Van Rompuy: Europe urgently needs an "anti-recession strategy"
Press remarks by President of the European Council Herman Van Rompuy
For the short term, we discussed the fiscal compact treaty and the crisis mechanisms. There is a number of things I can assert today:And on Greece from CNBC: Greek PM: Two Deals But No Drachma Ahead
- we will agree on the new fiscal compact treaty at the end of this month and we will sign it early March;
- our crisis mechanisms are being strengthened. The European Stability Mechanism (ESM) will enter into force in July 2012, earlier than planned. We will also assess the adequacy of the EFSF/ESM’s size without delay. ...
In the meantime, we should re-focus on growth and job creation. Growth friendly consolidation and job friendly growth are what we need! Growth should be enhanced by strengthening supply and by stimulating demand. We must urgently put in place an anti-recession strategy, mobilizing means and efforts at the Union level and - most importantly - at Member States level.
... our foremost concern should be stimulating employment. We need more, better and new jobs. Today, over 23 million people are unemployed in Europe. The economic slowdown risks increasing this number. Many of them are young. Women are particularly affected. The young are Europe's future and we need to give them hope and a decent perspective of joining the labour market.
In his first and only interview since taking office, Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos ... expressed complete confidence in his country’s ability to get through what is likely to be a harrowing two months as it approaches a 14.5 billion euro debt repayment in March.The Greek deal with creditors must be worked out over the next week or so. The second deal must be completed in February.
Two different financial deals must be negotiated before then. ... The first of the two deals is with the country’s private sector lenders—banks, pension funds, and hedge funds around the world that own 206 billion euros worth of Greek government debt. ... Greece must then come up with a 4-year economic plan that is acceptable to the IMF and the EU, in order to secure the 130 billion euros and fund its operations. That deal with the IMF and the EU must also get done before the March repayment deadline.
The EU summit meeting is on January 30th and will focus on growth.
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Growing Doubts about Greece
by Calculated Risk on 1/15/2012 09:26:00 PM
From the NY Times: As Reforms Flag in Greece, Europe Aims to Limit Damage
As Greece and its lenders prepare for another week of tense negotiations, European officials now say that the task is less to help the country through its troubles than to avoid the sort of uncontrolled default that many experts fear could threaten the global financial system.And more from Tim Duy at FedWatch: How's That Austerity Working?
Officials from the so-called troika of foreign lenders to Greece — the European Central Bank, European Union and International Monetary Fund — have come to believe that the country has neither the ability nor the will to carry out the broad economic reforms it has promised in exchange for aid, people familiar with the talks say, and they say they are even prepared to withhold the next installment of aid in March.
...
As recently as November, Greece and its lenders were optimistic that the country’s newly installed prime minister, Lucas Papademos ... would stabilize Greece’s soaring debt and help nurse the country back to health.
But since then, his interim government ... has been paralyzed.
Bottom Line: The actions of the European Central Bank greatly eased the immediate financial pressures in the Eurozone. But the underlying problem of internal imbalances remain, and the European response is still not addressing those imbalances. Instead, the commitment to the fixed exchange rate combined with Germany's failure to recognize that their current account surplus must turn to deficit if they ever hope to be repaid promises to lock the Eurozone on the path of ongoing recession.We should know about the Greek debt deal over the next week or two. I suspect a deal will be reached, and that Greece will receive the March aid. But at some point the "pretending" will have to stop.
Yesterday:
• Summary for Week Ending January 13th
• Schedule for Week of Jan 15th
Oil Prices and Economic Growth
by Calculated Risk on 1/15/2012 06:32:00 PM
A followup to the previous post on the possible impact on oil prices of an Iranian oil embargo, from Brad Plumer at the WaPo: How high oil prices could squelch the recovery
According to a U.S. Energy Information Administration analysis, a $20 increase in the cost of a barrel of oil — roughly what we saw last year — is estimated to shave roughly 0.4 points off GDP growth in the first year alone and boost unemployment by 0.1 percentage points. So if Iran threatens to close the Strait of Hormuz (through which about 20 percent of the world’s oil flows) and prices start screaming upward from $107 per barrel to $120 or beyond, that would put a very noticeable dent in growth.The recession in Europe, and slower growth in China (as Plumer notes), might offset some of the upward price pressure from a disruption of supply from Iran.
What’s more, oil shocks tend to have long-lingering effects. The EIA estimates that a $20 price increase continues biting into the economy for at last another year thereafter. James Hamilton, an economist at the University of California, San Diego, has suggested that the consequences of a price spike can persist for several quarters, as the resulting slowdown in consumer spending takes some time to ripple through the economy. That’s true even if the spike is only temporary and recedes quickly.
And below is a graph of gasoline prices. Gasoline prices had been slowly moving down since peaking in early May, but have started moving up again. Note: The graph below shows oil prices for WTI; gasoline prices in most of the U.S. are impacted more by Brent prices.
| Orange County Historical Gas Price Charts Provided by GasBuddy.com |
Hamilton: Implications of Iranian oil embargo
by Calculated Risk on 1/15/2012 01:49:00 PM
From Professor Hamilton at Econbrowser: Iranian oil embargo
The most likely outcome of an embargo on oil purchased from Iran is that the countries participating in the embargo buy less oil from Iran while other countries not participating in the embargo [buy] more oil from Iran ([1], [2]). While this would produce some dislocations, if total world oil production doesn't change, it would have little effect on either Iran or oil-consuming countries, and would basically be a symbolic gesture.Hamilton provides a summary of world oil production and prices following previous events.
If instead the embargo is successful in reducing the total amount of oil sold by Iran, then the shortfall for global consumers would have to be met by some combination of increased production elsewhere and oil price increases sufficient to bring down global petroleum demand.
As for the first possibility, there appears to be only a limited amount of excess oil-producing capacity at the moment, and certainly far short of the 4.3 million barrels per day that Iran produced in the first three quarters of 2011.
And for the second possibility, it is useful to draw a comparison with previous episodes in which geopolitical events led to production shortfalls from key producing areas.
At their peak disruptions, these events took out 4-7% of net world production and were associated with oil price increases of 25-70%.Oil prices are already very high; currently Brent Crude futures are at $110.44 per barrel, and WTI is at $98.70 per barrel. There is much more Hamilton's post.
Yesterday:
• Summary for Week Ending January 13th
• Schedule for Week of Jan 15th
Europe: Greek Debt talks will resume next week
by Calculated Risk on 1/15/2012 09:43:00 AM
From the WSJ: Greece to Resume Debt Talks
Greece will resume talks with its private-sector creditors next week on a massive debt restructuring plan ... "Our counterparts from the Institute for International Finance will return on Wednesday and our goal is to have a general outline agreed before the next euro-group meeting on Jan. 23," Mr. Venizelos said in a speech late Saturday.This will be (another) critical week for Europe. The goal is to have a preliminary deal before the next finance minister meeting on Jan 24th, and a complete loan package deal by the European Union summit meeting in Brussels on January 30th.
Under such a timeline, Greece would then proceed with a formal debt offer during the week of Feb. 6-10, Mr. Venizelos said, with the final debt exchange expected to be completed by the end of February.


