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Running Silent

I will soon be boarding a flight on my way to a real vacation.  ”Real” is defined as the absence of an internet connection, which will be the case for the first part of the trip.  Or so I am told by my wife who planned the trip, I suspect, by looking for locations without internet access.  More evidence that she is smarter than me.

This week the Federal Reserve will likely be overshadowed by the European summit and the expected Supreme Court ruling on health care, both of which I will miss in real time.  Of course, if markets tank on European news and there is a sudden dollar shortage, we would expect the Fed to assist via expanded swap lines.  For their part, the Europeans are reaching a critical moment in history.  They still have time to walk back from the abyss, but they need to move quickly.  Paul Krugman outlines three sensible proposals that offer the most near term hope – shared backing of the banking system, enable the ECB to act as lender of last resort to governments, and a higher inflation target.  A real fiscal union is too much to hope for anytime soon.

That said, while the Europeans have the capacity to move forward, the odds are all too high that they will choose to move backwards.  At this point, I can’t see the latter two proposals seeing the light of day.  On the first point, today’s comments by German Chancellor Angela Merkel seem pretty clear.  Via Bloomberg:

Merkel, speaking to a conference in Berlin today as Spain announced it would formally seek aid for its banks, dismissed “euro bonds, euro bills and European deposit insurance with joint liability and much more” as “economically wrong and counterproductive,” saying that they ran against the German constitution.

The ball is in Germany’s court, and they are dropping in it.

In other news, Greece is losing its finance minister:

Incoming Greek Finance Minister Vasilios Rapanos is going to resign after less than a week in office, according to the prime minister’s office.

The cause wasn’t immediately known, although Rapanos was rushed to the hospital on Friday after suffering from abdominal pain. At the time, the hospital released a statement saying he was admitted “because of intense abdominal pains, dizziness, nausea, sweating and weakness.”

Could be symptoms of extreme stress, which would hardly be surprising.  Note that Prime Minister Antonis Samaras will also be missing this week’s summit for health reasons.  It is hard not to suspect that the new Greek government is trying to avoid their European counterparts after getting their hands on the books and realizing that they had no good news for the Troika. It is very possible that the Greek electoral drama over the past two months piled more almost-permanent damage on the Greek economy.  Very discouraging; I still have trouble seeing how Greece stays in the Euro, except that there is no mechanism for exit.

Bottom Line:  I wish everyone the best managing in this difficult environment.  Posting will now be intermittent, depending on internet connection.

This post originally appeared at Tim Duy’s Fed Watch and is posted with permission.

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Edwin G. Dolan is an economist and educator with a Ph.D. from Yale University. Early in his career, he was a member of the economics faculty at Dartmouth College, the University of Chicago, and George Mason University. From 1990 to 2001, he taught in Moscow, Russia, where he and his wife founded the American Institute of Business and Economics (AIBEc), an independent, not-for-profit MBA program. Since 2001, he has taught at several universities in Europe, including Central European University in Budapest, the University of Economics in Prague, and the Stockholm School of Economics in Riga, where he has an ongoing annual visiting appointment. During breaks in his teaching career, he worked in Washington, D.C. as an economist for the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice and as a regulatory analyst for the Interstate Commerce Commission, and later served a stint in Almaty as an adviser to the National Bank of Kazakhstan. When not lecturing abroad, he makes his home in San Juan Islands, Washington.

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