Angry Bear
Relevant and even prescient commentary on news, politics and the economy.
  • US/Global Economics
  • Taxes/regulation
  • Healthcare
  • Law
  • Politics
  • Climate Change
  • Social Security
  • Hot Topics
« Back

Martin Wolf Buries the Lede

Ken Houghton | May 4, 2011 6:24 pm

From his column in today’s FT:

Even this is too simple, once one allows for banking: Ireland’s net debt was a mere 12% of GDP in 2007

In other words, in FT World, privatizing the profit and socializing the risk is A Great Idea that deserves the full support of the government.

Tags: bailout, European Union, Eurozone, solvency crisis Comments (5) | Digg Facebook Twitter |
5 Comments
  • ilsm says:
    May 4, 2011 at 7:34 pm

    Were I an MP in Ireland (Portugal, Spain, Greece…..) I would tell the ECB to buy all that bad paper, like the US Fed has done, with freshly coined Euros.

  • Ken Houghton says:
    May 4, 2011 at 9:59 pm

    A much better idea than any that has been tried so far.

  • ilsm says:
    May 5, 2011 at 7:12 am

    I briefly considered whether a euro member could do what Schacht did and have a shadow economy with selling “mefo bills”.  But it does not seem useful givien they have to be redeemed in euros outside the internal trading.

  • kharris says:
    May 5, 2011 at 10:34 am

    “In other words, in FT World, privatizing the profit and socializing the risk is A Great Idea that deserves the full support of the government”

    No. 

    No, that’s you with you knickers in a twist, attributing views to the FT (Wolf, actually) that are not supported by the quoted text.  Another entirely reasonable reading is that the Irish government has already assumed the debt of large failed banks, and for the purposes of understanding what is going on in Ireland, it might be useful to have in mind what the ex-bank governmen debt looks like.

  • dimm says:
    May 5, 2011 at 1:40 pm

    You misread what he said. 
    “allows for” = if you take Ireland into account
    He meant that Ireland is in dire straits despite that they had very low debt to GDP level.

Featured Stories

Where’s the beef?

Joel Eissenberg

Constitutionally

Ken Melvin

Money beyond borders: a book review

Joel Eissenberg

Taiwan: thinking the thinkable

Joel Eissenberg

Contributors

Dan Crawford
Robert Waldmann
Barkley Rosser
Eric Kramer
ProGrowth Liberal
Daniel Becker
Ken Houghton
Linda Beale
Mike Kimel
Steve Roth
Bill Haskell
NewDealdemocrat
Ken Melvin
Sandwichman
Peter Dorman
Kenneth Thomas
Bruce Webb
Rebecca Wilder
Spencer England
Joel Eissenberg

Blogs of Note

    • Naked Capitalism
    • Atrios (Eschaton)
    • Crooks and Liars
    • Wash. Monthly
    • ACA Signups
    • The one-handed economist
    • Hullabaloo
    • Talking Points
    • Calculated Risk
    • CEPR
    • Econospeak
    • EPI
Angry Bear
Copyright © 2026 Angry Bear Blog

Topics

  • US/Global Economics
  • Taxes/regulation
  • Healthcare
  • Law
  • Politics
  • Climate Change
  • Social Security
  • Hot Topics
  • US/Global Economics
  • Taxes/regulation
  • Healthcare
  • Law
  • Politics
  • Climate Change
  • Social Security
  • Hot Topics

Pages