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Strategies & Market Trends : US Inflation and What To Do About It -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RetiredNow who wrote (97)5/24/2010 7:10:01 PM
From: Eric  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1504
 
Little bit OT but what the heck:

In Europe, Britain May Face Largest Debt Hurdle

LONDON — As governments from Greece to Portugal to Spain try to sell markets on their budget-cutting zeal, the country that may face the biggest hurdle is Britain.

Propelled by a robust economy that finally collapsed in 2008, Britain’s spending boom was the most expansive in Europe, producing a welter of shiny hospitals, school buildings and highways, along with a cadre of well-paid public sector officials.

Now the new government must unwind not so much the debt incurred from two years of economic stimulus efforts, but more broadly, the structural deficits built up over more than a decade of expanded health care, education and pension commitments.

Prime Minister David Cameron has talked boldly of closing a British budget deficit now equal to 11 percent of gross domestic product. But he has also said that he will allow health spending to outpace inflation, continuing a trend started by the Labour government that has doubled the cost of the government’s elephantine National Health Service since 2000.

It is this apparent disconnect between the promises of politicians and the harsh demands of investors for immediate and across the board spending cuts that is at the root of the financial crisis in Europe today. Even after the nearly $1 trillion rescue package arranged by European Union leaders to shore up the weaker euro zone members, financial markets have gyrated as fears build that debt-plagued nations will lack the toughness to stand up to powerful unions and pare back once generous welfare programs, unable or unwilling to close gaping deficits.

“You need a martyr to cut this type of deficit,” said Andrew Lilico, chief economist at Policy Exchange, a right-leaning London research group, who has argued that quick and immediate spending cuts would actually hasten economic recovery rather than derail it. “You need someone to say, ‘I will do the right thing and everyone will hate me.’ ”

According to a recent analysis by Citigroup — meaning the part of the budget gap that will not close even when the economy improves --, Britain’s structural deficit was 9.2 percent of G.D.P. last year, ranking third in the world behind rapidly aging Japan and almost bankrupt Greece.

As is the case with other countries in Europe, like Spain, Greece and Ireland, Britain has a deficit that has grown mostly because of a decade of rising government outlays that seemed reasonable at the time, but rested heavily on rising tax revenue that disappeared when the bubble burst.

In a recent report, the International Monetary Fund warned that the countries that would have to make the biggest sacrifices in terms of spending cuts and tax increases to return to precrisis levels of indebtedness — Britain, Spain, France, Ireland and the United States — are the same ones that face the biggest increase in spending demands driven by a population with a rising number of elderly people, thus making the cuts all the harder to implement.

“All developed economies now have inbuilt structural components in their government deficits due to having pension and health systems and aging populations,” said Edward Hugh, an independent economist based in Barcelona. “And these costs will go up by the year.”

The British chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, who has long urged the Conservative Party to trim the deficit, said on Monday that he would push through £6 billion ($8.65 billion) in spending cuts. Though decidedly modest when compared with a budget deficit estimated to be about £178 billion, the cuts represent an attempt to convince skittish financial markets that Mr. Cameron’s policy team is committed to fiscal restraint.

The latest menu of restrictions, freezes and spending reversals also represent an attempt to convince the public that Britain needs to be in tune with the budget-cutting in Greece, Portugal, Spain and other parts of Europe.

“The years of public-sector plenty are over,” Mr. Osborne said. “The more decisively we act, the more quickly we can come through these tough times.”

Mr. Cameron has fulminated publicly about cutting public sector pay and decreed that members of Parliament themselves take a 5 percent pay cut.

But it remains unclear whether he can force significant savings in what has become in many respects a public sector aristocracy of elite civil servants, heads of national railroads and top officials of obscure agencies like the National Policing Improvement Agency and the Horserace Betting Levy Board. The heads of those two agencies, for example, were paid salaries last year that exceed Mr. Cameron’s pay of £197,000 (about $284,000) — £211,831 and £220,665, respectively.

Among the highest paid have been administrators and doctors within the country’s government funded National Health Service which has become its own separate economy with its 1.7 million employees and 100 billion plus budget.

Debt Rising in EuropeFor example, David Taube, a doctor, administrator and medical director for five hospitals comprising the Imperial College N.H.S. Trust, was paid £260,000 (about $375,000) at current exchange rates last year. That’s also more than the prime minister received.

According to the TaxPayers’ Alliance, an advocacy group for spending cuts, the highest-paid 805 government employees in Britain received a 5.4 percent pay increase last year, with the average official taking in £209,224.

Whether it be the £1.3 million paid to the chief executive of the Royal Mail, the £267,000 for the head of information technology in the Department for Work and Pensions or the £270,000 earned this year by the chief executive of the Guy’s and St. Thomas Hospitals in London, the galloping pay of public sector workers in Britain not only has become a major component of the country’s structural deficit, but shows little sign of letting up.

“We have been doing this for five years now, and the numbers just get bigger and bigger,” said John O’Connell, an analyst at the TaxPayers’ Alliance.

Starting in 2000, the Labour government made it a priority to improve the N.H.S.’s lackluster reputation and invested billions in bricks and mortar as well as the salaries of its growing ranks of doctors and administrators.

Health care spending in Britain soared, to 9 percent of G.D.P. from 3 percent. The image of the service has been transformed from one that once exemplified drab inefficiencies of the British state to what is now hailed as a world archetype even by Conservative politicians like Mr. Cameron.

As for Dr. Taube, a spokeswoman for the Imperial Healthcare Trust said that he was a leading renal clinician and that the bulk of his salary, £180,000 to £185,000, came from his clinical work. He was paid an additional £75,000 to £80,000 by the government for his administrative duties.

Now the new government must wrestle with whether it can restrain such pay and spending and at what cost politically.

nytimes.com



To: RetiredNow who wrote (97)6/7/2010 7:47:40 AM
From: Eric  Respond to of 1504
 
Debt concerns drive euro to fresh lows

The euro dropped to a four-year low against the dollar and an 18-month trough against the pound on Monday as concerns over the eurozone’s fiscal position continued to undermine the single currency.

The euro sold off sharply on Friday as reports suggested that François Fillon, France’s prime minister, saw advantages in “parity” in the euro against the dollar. It emerged that this was a mistranslation, with Mr Fillon saying that he saw advantages in the “exchange rate” of the euro against the dollar.

Nevertheless, analysts said that European politicians did not appear unduly worried about the recent drop in the euro, given the competitive advantages that it would provide.

“Even without the incorrect translation, Mr Fillon’s comments underline that European policy is unlikely to provide support for the euro,” said Ulrich Leuchtmann at Commerzbank.

The euro was also undermined after Hungary warned that its economy was in a “very grave situation” and that talk of a government default was “not an exaggeration”.

This once again put pressure on eurozone government bond markets.

Steve Barrow at Standard Bank said the chances of a precipitous fall in the euro were pretty high if the price action in the eurozone bond market persisted.

He said even core eurozone bond markets such as France, Austria and Belgium were coming under heavy selling pressure, not just peripheral markets such as Portugal and Spain

“The issue now might not be whether it is Portugal or Spain or Ireland that feel the heat next, but whether the market will just sell all [eurozone] government bonds indiscriminately,” said Mr Barrow.

“Either way, we think there’s more duress for the euro, egged on by the perception that French officials – and others – are only happy to see the currency dive.”

The euro dropped to a low of $1.1875 against the dollar, its weakest level since March 2006, before recovering some poise to stand down 0.3 per cent at $1.1942 and hit an 18-month low of £0.8236 against the pound.

The single currency also fell to its weakest level in eight and a half years against the yen, easing 0.5 per cent to Y109.46.

Meanwhile, sharp falls in Asian stock markets undermined risk appetite, driving haven demand for the dollar and the yen and putting pressure on emerging market and commodity-linked currencies.

In Asia, the South Korean won fell 2.8 per cent to Won1,235.61 against the dollar, while the Malaysian ringgit dropped 1.7 per cent to M$3.3300.

Elsewhere, the Australian dollar fell 1.1 per cent to $0.8142 against the US dollar and the New Zealand dollar lost 1 per cent to $0.6632.

The dollar also rose 0.2 per cent to $1.4434 against the pound and climbed 0.1 per cent to SFr1.1640 against the Swiss franc, but eased 0.3 per cent to Y91.61 against a buoyant yen

ft.com