Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 53,770
5) What happens to mortgage holders?
I presume that interest rates will rise to around 10%. They are being kept low by the ECB at the moment. Depositors will want some compensation for keeping their savings in a mickey mouse currency.
Why not devalue the euro instead? If the rest of Europe wont allow that, will they really allow one of its member states to go bankrupt?
I don`t see devaluation of the currency as an option...our foreign debt would be instantly much bigger
to visionaries like himself:
I think (in the very unlikley event that we unravelled the whole euro project and reverted to the Irish Pound - I presume he's only proposing to go back to decimalisation and not £.s.d.) - that we wouldn't actually need to devalue the currency - because it would be absolutely worthless, what country in their right mind would want to buy a currency of a country that the world perceives to be a basket case, and in effect has just declared itself bankrupt?
5) What happens to mortgage holders?
I presume that interest rates will rise to around 10%. They are being kept low by the ECB at the moment. Depositors will want some compensation for keeping their savings in a mickey mouse currency.
Why not devalue the euro instead? If the rest of Europe wont allow that, will they really allow one of its member states to go bankrupt?
The point in devaluing is that we just have to admit that we are bankrupt and cannot trade our way out of it. By devaluing and reneging on our international debts we can start again. Much like a person filing for bankruptcy.
Brendan
[broken link removed]contradicts your assertion, Protocol. It is true that we have a positive balance on visible trade, and have had for some time. But we can see that this is mainly transfer pricing as any surplus goes right back to its foreign owners.Indeed, we are fast heading towards a balance of payments surplus, which means our annual income will exceed our annual expenditure, and so we will soon be a net saving nation.
[broken link removed]contradicts your assertion, Protocol. It is true that we have a positive balance on visible trade, and have had for some time. But we can see that this is mainly transfer pricing as any surplus goes right back to its foreign owners.
In fact, we know that the private sector is massively in debt to foreigners which shows up in the dependence of the banking system on international interbank support.
I would like to see a rational discussion of this issue. I don't want to listen to the ridicule and the attacks on McWilliams.( Feel free to attack his manner in this thread) I don't want to listen to his egotrips - but I do want to hear both sides of the argument.
Let's discuss the point and not the man.
1) I presume that we could actually leave the euro zone? I think it would be difficult, but if we had to do it, we would.
I would have thought that devaluing was a way to recognise and deal with a difficulty, as opposed to declaring bankruptcy, but I am not a commercial banker or legal eagle familiar with such things.2) I presume that if we do so, the country as a whole must declare bankruptcy.
We will have a massive international loans denominated in euros and we will be trying to pay them off from the punt, which will be worth,say 40% less than it is now.
I'm afraid I'm still not following this Ireland Inc. bankruptcy argument.3) If the country goes, the banks go as there is no point in having a bankrupt guarantor.
Surely deposits [or loans in accounts] would become converted at the stated exchange rate.4) What happens all our deposits in Irish banks which are currently denominated in euro?
I presume that they become punts on a one for one basis. So they effectively lose 40% of their value.
I foresee a return to the 22% Commercial rates in 1992.5) What happens to mortgage holders?
I presume that interest rates will rise to around 10%. They are being kept low by the ECB at the moment. Depositors will want some compensation for keeping their savings in a mickey mouse currency.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?