Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Time-Lapse Interactive Graph Shows Stunning Rise in Anti-Euro Sentiment in Italy
- Japanese Manufacturing Output Falls for First Time in 2012
- Laughable Text of EU "Memorandum of Understanding"; ESM Not Been Ratified Yet Already Requires Changes; How Much ESM Firepower Is There?
Time-Lapse Interactive Graph Shows Stunning Rise in Anti-Euro Sentiment in Italy Posted: 29 Jun 2012 12:09 PM PDT The rise of the Five Star Movement in Italy is the number one happening in Europe right now and mainstream media has not even begun to cover it in any depth. The movement is led by an Italian comedian, Beppe Grillo. Main Rules for the Five Star Movement
Beppe Grillo's personal position, not a mandate for the Five Star Movement is "Get out of the Euro and default on debt" For more on the Five Star Movement please see Six Reasons Why Italy May Exit the Euro Before Spain; Ultimate Occupy Movement Time-Lapse Interactive Polls Following are some time lapse polls of the Five Star Movement and other political parties in Italy. Please give the graphs extra time to load. The polls are from data gathered by data gathered by Termometro Polico (one on the best Italian poll-makers according to a friend who sent me the link.) The important poll is in tab number four. Explanations and Comments on the graphs appear below. For now, please click on tab number four. You may also wish to go to the link above for additional information (in Italian). Graphs courtesy of Termometro Polico via tools from Tableau Software. Explanations and Comments The following comments are from Lorenzo, who lives in Italy. He is the person who sent me the link to Termometro Polico. Hello MishCoalition Building For more on the difficulty of building a coalition in Italy, please see comments from Andrea in my post Reader from Italy Explains Why Early Elections Might Lead to "Deadlock". Andrea is a reader who is from Italy but now lives in France. The pertinent section is labeled "Explaining Italian Politics". Five Star Movement September 2011 vs. June 2016 This simple graph below shows the stunning rise of the Five Star Movement ![]() Implications of the rise in popularity of the Five Star Movement from 3.7% in September 2011 to 20.6% in June 2012 are both massive and obvious. Yet mainstream media in the US and Europe have essentially ignored the phenomena. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Japanese Manufacturing Output Falls for First Time in 2012 Posted: 29 Jun 2012 09:22 AM PDT The short term effect of Japanese stimulus following the earthquake and tsunami has now worn off. All Japan has to show for that stimulus is a bigger pile of debt, proving once again the Broken Window Fallacy. In the real world, Japan has a debt-to GDP ratio of 225% and rising. Japan's export machine has stalled. So has Japanese manufacturing in general. Markit reports Japanese manufacturing output falls for first time in 2012 to date June data pointed to the first month-on-month reduction in manufacturing output since December 2011, as both new business and new export orders fell. Backlogs of work decreased as a result, while employment growth eased to only a marginal rate. On the price front, factory gate charges fell further in June, in response to a first reduction of average costs in 20 months.Japan Doubles Sales Tax The AP reports Lawmakers in Japan OK hike in sales tax Japan's lower house voted Tuesday to double the country's sales tax to 10 percent over three years in a bid to rein in a bulging national debt as an aging population burdens the country's social security system.Japan is in a very tight situation. The US will find itself in a similar situation down the road if it listens to misguided economists hell-bent on getting government to waste more money. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 29 Jun 2012 12:00 AM PDT Futures are flying over a "breakthrough" that supposedly will lower borrowing costs for Italy, Spain, and Ireland. The "breakthrough" is a modification to the terms of the ESM to allow "the possibility" to recapitalize banks directly. Amusingly, the existing ESM agreement has not even been ratified. The agreement is still on hold in Germany (numerous other countries have yet to ratify as well). Yet the "Memorandum of Understanding" worked out at the summit today appears to require changes to the ESM. Other ambiguous statement from the eurogroup committee are simply laughable. Here is the complete text. Emphasis added in places. EURO AREA SUMMIT STATEMENT - 29 June 2012 -ESM Under Review by German Constitutional Court Bear in mind that ESM ratification in Germany has already been delayed subject to Review by German Constitutional Court Germany's highest court asked the country's president on Thursday to delay ratification of the permanent euro bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, and the fiscal pact into law next week. If he complies, the move could delay the implementation of the ESM by several weeks in the latest setback for Chancellor Angela Merkel.More Challenges Coming The proposed changes will put German taxpayers (eurozone taxpayers in general) at more risk. Thus, it's safe to say that more challenges to the ESM are coming. However, let's assume for the moment that Finland, Austria, Germany, and the Netherlands accept more taxpayer risk. (Admittedly that's quite an assumption). Is this a euro-saving breakthrough? Van Rumpoy Calls Summit a "Breakthrough" Please consider EU Leaders Ease Debt-Crisis Rules on Spain in Merkel Retreat After 13 1/2 hours of talks ending at 4:30 a.m. in Brussels today, leaders of the 17 euro countries dropped the requirement that governments get preferred creditor status on crisis loans to Spain's blighted banks, European Union President Herman Van Rompuy said. Banks can also be recapitalized directly with European bailout funds rather than being channeled through governments, he said.Breakthrough? Really? How Much Firepower is Needed? Bloomberg reports ...
For now, the market is pleased with this non-breakthrough. Let's see how long it lasts. I suspect not long. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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