Blog honetan aspalditik aritu gara Greziaz.
Hona hemen sarrera batzuk:
2010ean.
Randall Wray: Greziaz haratago
https://www.unibertsitatea.net/blogak/heterodoxia/2010/04/05/greziaz-haratago/
Randall Wray eta Warren Mosler: Orain zer? Zein da hurrengoa?
https://www.unibertsitatea.net/blogak/heterodoxia/2010/12/14/orain-zer-zein-da-hurrengoa/
2011n.
Warren Mosler: Euroaren paradisua: zein irtengo da lehena?
DTM. Diru Teoria Modernoa Irlandan: zorraren eta austeritatearen aurkako irtenbideak
2012an.
Warren Mosler: Greziaz berriz
https://www.unibertsitatea.net/blogak/heterodoxia/2012/02/23/warren-mosler-greziaz-berriz/
Warren Mosler: Eurolandiako zor guztiarekin bukatzeko metodorik zuzenena
GEHIGARRIAK:
Mike Norman (2015): New Greek Finance Minister said, “Greece will neither want to leave the euro nor threaten to do so.”
http://mikenormaneconomics.blogspot.com.es/2015/01/new-greek-finance-minister-said-greece.html
“Oh well, this thing’s going nowhere. It’s got the liberal disease of big talk, no action, written all over it.
The new Finance Minister is this guy, Yanis Varoufakis. He once said, “Greece will neither want to leave the euro nor threaten to do so.”
Done. Finished. Toast.
There is no way that Tsipras and Syriza can deliver what they say they will deliver while in the euro. NO. WAY.
The sad thing is, this guy Varoufakis taught at University of Texas. That’s where MMTer and economic liberal, James K. Galbraith teaches. Too bad he didn’t learn a thing or two while he was there.
W. Mosler on Yanis Varoufakis (Minister of Finance in Greece, in 2015):
Back in 2011.
(Exit plan: Mosler/Pilkington: The IMF-ECB ‘Plan’ – Fig-Leaf upon Fig-Leaf:
Response to Varoufakis’ response to that plan:
“Lastly, we should note that, should a nation exit the Eurozone in the manner we have outlined, a worldwide deflationary collapse might actually work to their advantage. Why? Because with their new currency they could undertake an Argentinean-style jobs guarantee program which would maintain full employment domestically while real terms of trade shifted dramatically in their favour as worldwide prices fell. Or, to put it another way: peripheral countries like Ireland would no longer have to rely on export-oriented growth in a world plagued by massive deflationary contraction. Instead they could run fiscal deficits to maintain full employment and high living standards while having little concern for the potential devaluation of the new currency caused thereby because worldwide prices would be falling at the same time.”
W. Mosler on Y. Varoufakis (Back in 2012):
Warren Mosler November 15, 2012
“Yanis is confused on his monetary operations.“
Bill Mitchell (2015): Conceding to Greece opens the door for France and Italy
http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=30048
“… I doubt that they will agree to a 50 per cent write-off in Greece’s debt because then the citizens of Spain, Italy and, even France, would line up for the same. Then it is game-over for the Eurozone. More likely, if Syriza sticks to its promises, then there will be an organised way to ease them out of the game. Greece will win either way.”
“The history of the EMU to date has taught us that if Germany is unable to meet rules, then the rules will be altered. Otherwise, the rules will be used as a blunt weapon to devastate the employment base and living standards of weaker nations without the political clout of Germany.”
“The suppression of real wages growth in Germany and the growth in the (very) low-wage ‘mini-jobs’ meant that Germany severely stifled domestic spending up to 2005. Schröder’s austerity policies forced harsh domestic restraint onto German workers, which meant that Germany could only grow through widening export surpluses.
(…)
The growth in employment in Germany in the lead up to the crisis was not due to a well-functioning monetary union.
Rather, it reflected its malfunctioning because it depended on widening trade imbalances – huge surpluses in Germany and some of its neighbours against widening deficits in the periphery, covered by unsustainable capital flows from the former to the latter.”
“If Germany does give up on its austerity mania and fiscal deficits expand then all of the Eurozone will return to growth. Greece could resume growth tomorrow if the new government announces a large-scale public employment program. It is a lack of spending that is causing stagnation. The obsession with structural reforms is a side-issue. The recession was due to a collapse in spending not any shift in competitiveness.
It will be amazing if Germany agrees to write off half of Greek debt. We will see whether that happens.”
Bill Mitchell (2012): Standby for the third Greek bailout
http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=18305
“Baldin eta Greziari ahalbidetzen bazaio bere zorraren % 53,5, zergatik ez genuke espero Italiak, Espainiak, Irlandak, Portugalek eta gainontzeko herrialdeek gauza bera egitea? Zergatik ez diete eskatuko herrialde horien populazioek beren gobernuei antzeko akordioak lortzea, guztiak austeritate bide kaltegarri beretik ibiliz?”
joseba says:
Mosler/Pilkington, espainieraz:
La propuesta de salida del euro de Mosler y Pilkington
Mosler: “Varoufakis se equivocó al ordenar el cierre de los bancos griegos”