Agregando algo más de leña a la profusa fogarata que es la situación financiera internacional, los chicos de Zero Hedge lanzan hace un rato un informe supuestamente filtrado de la National Security Agency (USA) sobre la situación económica en Francia. Acá va:
Título: French
Economy In "Dire Straits", "Worse Than Anyone Can Imagine",
Leaked NSA Cable Reveals
Texto: Earlier
today Wikileaks released a new batch of NSA intercepts among which one in
particular stands out: an intercepted communication which reveals that then
French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici believes the French economic situation
was far worse, as of mid-2012, than perceived.
Specifically,
Moscovici who served as French finance minister until 2014 and then became
European commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs, Taxation and Customs,
used some very colorful language, i.e., the French economic situation was
"worse than anyone [could] imagine and drastic measures [would] have to be
taken in the next two years”.
Needless to say,
no drastic measures were taken. In fact, no measures at all were taken because
thanks to the ECB's "whatever it takes" 2012 intervention and
subsequent QE, pushed French yields to record low levels making the need for
any reform moot (a la Greece, until the whole circus exploded).
He remarks about
that the situation with the automotive industry was more critical than a
pre-retirement unemployment supplement known as AER, which he also thought
wouldn't have had a severe impact on elections (while senator Bourquin thought
would have driven voters to right-wing National Front).
Moscovici's
conclusion was that "the situation is dire" although the finance
minister ignored warnings that without a "pre-retirement unemployment
supplement known as the AER... the ruling Socialist Party will have a rough
time in the industrial basin of the country, with voters turning to the
rightwing National Front."
Moscovici
disagreed. Fast forward 3 years, and not only did French unemployment just hit
an all time high confirming that the economic situation has indeed never been
more dire...
... but the
frontrunner for the next French president is none other than National Front's
Marine Le Pen, who will no doubt seize this memo as further proof of the
terrible economic state of the country and leverage it even more to her
benefit, and add even more fuel to the Frexit fire. As a reminder, Le Pen now
prefers to be called Madame Frexit because as she warned last week, when she
becomes president, unless the Eurozone yields to her demands, France will be
the next country out of the monetary project effectively ending the Eurozone.
For more read "Forget Grexit, "Madame Frexit" Says France Is
Next: French Presidential Frontrunner Wants Out Of "Failed" Euro."
Here is the
intercept (link):
French Finance
Minister Says Economy in Dire Straits, Predicts Two Atrocious Years Ahead
(TS//SI//NF) (TS//SI//NF) The French economic situation is worse than anyone
can imagine and drastic measures will have to be taken in the next 2 years, according
to Finance, Economy, and Trade Minister Pierre Moscovici.
On 19 July,
Moscovici, under pressure to reestablish a preretirement unemployment
supplement known as the AER, warned that the situation is dire. Upon learning
that there are no funds available for the AER, French Senator Martial Bourquin
warned Moscovici that without the AER program the ruling Socialist Party will
have a rough time in the industrial basin of the country, with voters turning
to the rightwing National Front. Moscovici disagreed, asserting that the
inability to reinstitute the AER will have no impact in electoral terms,
besides, the situation with faltering automaker PSA Peugeot Citroen is more
important than the AER.
(COMMENT: PSA has
announced plans to close assembly plants
and lay off some 8,000 workers.)
Moscovici warned
that the 2013 budget is not going to be a "good news budget," with
the government needing to find at least an additional 33 billion euros ($39.9
billion). Nor will 2014 be a good year. Bourquin persisted, warning that the
Socialist Party will find itself in a situation similar to that of Socialist
former Spanish President Zapatero, who was widely criticized for his handling
of his country's debt situation. Moscovici countered that it was not Zapatero
whose behavior the French government would emulate, but rather Social Democrat
former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.
(COMMENT:
Schroeder, chancellor from 1998 to 2005, was widely credited with helping to
restore German competitiveness. He favored shifting from pure austerity
measures to measures that encourage economic growth and advocated a common EU
financial policy.)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario