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The Welfare State's Death Spiral

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
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How do we invest in this type of world? How do our children plan for their futures? What plans do we make for our own retirements, can we count on pensions, profit sharing or 401k plans if the government holds all the cards and changes all the rules?

May 10, 2010
The Welfare State's Death Spiral
By Robert Samuelson
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2010/05/10/the_welfare_states_death_spiral_105503.html

WASHINGTON -- What we're seeing in Greece is the death spiral of the welfare state. This isn't Greece's problem alone, and that's why its crisis has rattled global stock markets and threatens economic recovery. Virtually every advanced nation, including the United States, faces the same prospect. Aging populations have been promised huge health and retirement benefits, which countries haven't fully covered with taxes. The reckoning has arrived in Greece, but it awaits most wealthy societies.

Americans dislike the term "welfare state" and substitute the bland word "entitlements." The vocabulary doesn't alter the reality. Countries cannot overspend and overborrow forever. By delaying hard decisions about spending and taxes, governments maneuver themselves into a cul de sac. To be sure, Greece's plight is usually described as a European crisis -- especially for the euro, the common money used by 16 countries -- and this is true. But only up to a point.

Euro coins and notes were introduced in 2002. The currency clearly hasn't lived up to its promises. It was supposed to lubricate faster economic growth by eliminating the cost and confusion of constantly converting between national currencies. More important, it would promote political unity. With a common currency, people would feel "European." Their identities as Germans, Italians and Spaniards would gradually blend into a continental identity.

None of this has happened. Economic growth in the "euro area" (the countries using the currency) averaged 2.1 percent from 1992 to 2001 and 1.7 percent from 2002 to 2008. Multiple currencies were never a big obstacle to growth; high taxes, pervasive regulations and generous subsidies were. As for political unity, the euro is now dividing Europeans. The Greeks are rioting. The countries making $145 billion of loans to Greece -- particularly the Germans -- resent the costs of the rescue. A single currency could no more subsume national identities than drinking Coke could make people American. If other euro countries (Portugal, Spain, Italy) suffer Greece's fate -- lose market confidence and can't borrow at plausible rates -- there would be a wider crisis.

But the central cause is not the euro, even if it has meant Greece can't depreciate its own currency to ease the economic pain. Budget deficits and debt are the real problems; and these stem from all the welfare benefits (unemployment insurance, old-age assistance, health insurance) provided by modern governments.

Countries everywhere already have high budget deficits, aggravated by the recession. Greece is exceptional only by degree. In 2009, its budget deficit was 13.6 percent of its gross domestic product (a measure of its economy); its debt, the accumulation of past deficits, was 115 percent of GDP. Spain's deficit was 11.2 percent of GDP, its debt 56.2 percent; Portugal's figures were 9.4 percent and 76.8 percent. Comparable figures for the United States -- calculated slightly differently -- were 9.9 percent and 53 percent.

There are no hard rules as to what's excessive, but financial markets -- the banks and investors that buy government bonds -- are obviously worried. Aging populations make the outlook worse. In Greece, the 65-and-over population is projected to go from 18 percent of the total in 2005 to 25 percent in 2030. For Spain, the increase is from 17 percent to 25 percent.

The welfare state's death spiral is this: Almost anything governments might do with their budgets threatens to make matters worse by slowing the economy or triggering a recession. By allowing deficits to balloon, they risk a financial crisis as investors one day -- no one knows when -- doubt governments' ability to service their debts and, as with Greece, refuse to lend except at exorbitant rates. Cutting welfare benefits or raising taxes all would, at least temporarily, weaken the economy. Perversely, that would make paying the remaining benefits harder.

Greece illustrates the bind. To gain loans from other European countries and the International Monetary Fund, it embraced budget austerity. Average pension benefits will be cut 11 percent; wages for government workers will be cut 14 percent; the basic rate for the value added tax will rise from 21 percent to 23 percent. These measures will plunge Greece into a deep recession. In 2009, unemployment was about 9 percent; some economists expect it to peak near 19 percent.

If only a few countries faced these problems, the solution would be easy. Unlucky countries would trim budgets and resume growth by exporting to healthier nations. But developed countries represent about half the world economy; most have overcommitted welfare states. They might defuse the dangers by gradually trimming future benefits in a way that reassured financial markets. In practice, they haven't done that; indeed, President Obama's health program expands benefits. What happens if all these countries are thrust into Greece's situation? One answer -- another worldwide economic collapse -- explains why dawdling is so risky.​
 

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
Look at these benefit packages that Greeks get!! Everyone gets 6 weeks paid vacation and 14 "monthly" paychecks. And they retire in their 50's. No wonder the nation is beyond bankrupt

http://www.albertalocalnews.com/red...o_wonder_Greece_needs_a_bailout_93067144.html

NO WONDER GREECE NEEDS A BAILOUT

As I type, the Greek citizenry is up in arms over the prospect of having to give up their rather luxurious social welfare benefits in order to stave off bankruptcy.

Riots have ensued and people have died as the result of Greek labour unions taking to the streets to protest the potential loss of government-funded extended vacations and the earliest average retirement age in the European Union.

Currently, all Greeks enjoy six weeks of (subsidized) paid vacation per year, and (subsidized) retirement plans that allow government workers to retire in their early 50s, and private sector employees to routinely retire before the age of 60.

A full one-third of the workforce in Greece is employed by government, leaving precious few to actually pay the taxes for all that government largesse.


The fact is that Greece hasn’t been able to pay for all those government employees for some time now, and has gone crying to her fellow EU members for money to keep the gravy train flowing.

Germany, which has been the economic powerhouse of Europe since the late ’90s, has been tapped to pay the tab in the form of multibillion dollar loans.

This author alludes that Canada is in a similar circumstance with Quebec not being able to afford its welfare state.


http://money.cnn.com/2010/03/04/news/international/greece_pay.fortune/index.htm

Why cutting Greece's 14th salary payment is a bad idea

NEW YORK (Fortune) -- Greek prime minister George Papandreou may have made a big mistake. As part of a plan to fix his nation's ruined economy, he announced Wednesday that he aims to cut 30% of civil servants' holiday bonuses which are part of Greece's "14th salary" payment schedule.
Papandreou has to walk the line between answering the demands of European Union nations who could bail Greece out of its crisis and rallying citizen support for his reforms. One way or another, he has to cut costs.

"The country hasn't lived within its means," says Barry Eichengreen a political science and economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley. "Now, the government has to tighten its belt, and the private sector does too."

But cutting a key part of the nation's employee benefits may not be the swiftest move. Greek civil servants would be willing to go to war over major changes in the 14th salary, the leader of Greece's largest labor union, Yiannis Panagopoulos, has reportedly said. And while holiday bonuses certainly sound like excess spending, they aren't necessarily.

The 14th salary works like this: Greek workers get their annual salary in roughly 14 installments. On top of 12 monthly payments, employees receive double their paychecks in December, right in time for Christmas consumerism. They also receive half of their monthly spending in the spring to shell out on goods for Easter. Then they get another half-salary boost in July, before their traditional summer vacation.

But the 14th salary system isn't the problem with the Greek economy, says Elias Papaioannou, an expert on international economics at Dartmouth College, "it's just an alternative way to distribute."

I can't believe how CNN defends the Greek entitlements. The article is full of the top union leader of Greece providing justification for the Greek spending system. Then they go on to pretty much say that the real solution is in raising taxes.
 
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