Aberlour10, on 2011-June-30, 06:56, said:
Nowdays capitalism is on a very strange stage, profits are as always private thing, losses and debts are the public one.
Externalities are a bitch...
This might seem cynical, however, I don't think that the policy makers give a damn about the Greeks.
I think that their decisions are being driven by the fact that there are a large number of undercapitalized German and French banks that lent lots of money to the Greeks, Spanish, ... When this whole things blows up, the Greek economy is going to face a massive shock; however, its the German banking system that will be left holding the bag. (The US also has a fairly significant exposure. You know all those nice safe money market funds where people like to park their $$$... Guess where the banks went and parked a bunch of those funds).
To make things even more complicated, lots of folks knew that something was up and tried to hedge their exposure using derivatives and the like...
Sadly, these strategies assumed that the folks issuing the insurance policies have enough funds in place to cover their exposure. (Right now, a lot of very smart folks are spending a lot of effort trying to make sure that Greece doesn't formally go into default to prevent a whole wave of derivatives from flipping over)
Simply put, there is no way to draw nice clean lines and ensure that
1. The Greeks get screwed
2. The bankers who made bad loans go bust
3. The public at large doesn't get affected
The public at large wanted growth, growth, growth which meant that reserve requirements aren't what they should be and the bankers were forced to chase after ever more speculative investments to ensure a "competitive" return...
One way or another, we're going to be stuck paying to clean up this damn mess
I'm not sure whether the payment is going to take the form of bailout funds (which eventually need to be paid for with - gasp - taxes) or alternatively with a stock market crash. However, its clear that its going to cost real $$$ trying to get all this crap out of the system.
At the end of the day, this is going to boil down to a balancing act in which the banks try to figure out just how much of Greece can get auctioned off to cover some of these debts without triggering an outright default on the debt.