Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Europe: The New Plan | STRATFOR - "The checkbook is not the ultimate power in the galaxy. The ultimate power comes from the law backed by a gun." Also, a maxicard about European navigation on the Danube, postmarked at Sulina, Romania

Europe: The New Plan | STRATFOR

"Northern Europe is composed of advanced technocratic economies, made possible by the capital-generating capacity of the well-watered North European Plain and its many navigable rivers (it is much cheaper to move goods via water than land, and this advantage grants nations situated on such waterways a steady supply of surplus capital)."


"Southern Europe, in comparison, suffers from an arid, rugged topography and lack of navigable rivers. This lack of rivers does more than deny them a local capital base, it also inhibits political unification; lacking clear core regions, most of these states face the political problems of the European Union in microcosm."


"Central Europe — largely former Soviet territories — have yet different rules of behavior. Some countries, like Poland, fit in well with the northern Europeans, but they require outside defense support in order to maintain their positions. The frigid weather of the Baltics limits population sizes, demoting these countries to being, at best, the economic satellites of larger powers (they’re hoping for Sweden while fearing it will be Russia). Bulgaria and Romania are a mix of north and south, sitting astride Europe’s longest navigable river yet being so far removed from the European core that their successful development may depend upon events in Turkey, a state that is not even an EU member. "


"Three complications exist, however. First, when a bailout is required, it is clearly because something has gone terribly wrong. In Greece’s case, it was out-of-control government spending with no thought to the future; in essence, Athens took that black card and leapt straight into the economic abyss. In Ireland’s case, it was private-sector overindulgence, which bubbled the size of the financial sector to more than four times the entire country’s gross domestic product. In both cases, recovery was flat-out impossible without the countries’ eurozone partners stepping in and declaring some sort of debt holiday, and the result was a complete funding of all Greek and Irish deficit spending for three years while they get their houses in order."

Read more: Europe: The New Plan | STRATFOR 

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"As German Chancellor Angela Merkel put it, Germans are not going to retire at 67 so Greeks can retire at 58."
Poland stuck between Russia and Germany
written by: George Friedman, 10-Dec-10 http://www.stratfor.com


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A maxicard about European navigation on the Danube, postmarked at Sulina, Romania: