Courtesy of ZeroHedge. View original post here.
Submitted by Tyler Durden.
In a brief though detailed clip, Stratfor's VP Peter Zeihan discusses the risk of contagion from Greece and the 'creative' – if not self-centered – suggestions for a solution to these problems. Earlier in the week we described Deutsche's suggestion of a dual currency – the GEURO – and that is where Zeihan focuses, noting that "The Greek economy is as deliciously non-competitive as the German economy is hyper-competitive" – this mismatch is the core of the crisis. The GEURO (trading as gEUR.QQ on the pink sheets) plan doesn't address this mismatch but extends it just a little longer while bailout funds will continue to funneled through Athens to the country's lenders (read European banks) but private capital would be unlikely to flow and without outside capital, they would be unlikely to stimulate the growth they need to regain any kind of solid footing. Greek debt levels to GDP would rise (not fall) under the plan as EUR debts would remain but GEURO incomes (devalued) would be the source of GDP – making a long-term recovery even less likely. The only winners – simple: foreign banks who have exposure to Greece. The Stratfor VP goes on to note that the vast bulk of Greek debt is held by the ECB, IMF, and the Greeks (Greek banks) adding that private losses would not be catastrophic in the event of another Greek default – though we point out that it is the contagion effects (as we have so critically established in the past) that makes the Greek imbroglio so important to watch.


