The crisis deepens as Italy is now on the brink. Italy isn't like Greece or Ireland, it is a big economy with their government owing 120% of GDP to creditors. Italy is the third biggest economy in the Euro zone and even the enhanced €1 trillion bailout fund is nowhere near enough to save it if default comes.
Italy has no credible plan to resolve the problem and the market knows it. The market is demanding higher and higher interest rates (6.69% is the latest) to fund their overspending and the likelihood is that that rate will rise as Italy must borrow over €300bn next year.
There is a solution. Let the European Central Bank (ECB) lend the money to Italy. The ECB could buy Italian Government bonds and can theoretically supply all of Italy's needs. The Germans, at least, completely oppose this move.
If the ECB buys Italian debt they will do so with money they simply create. As with Quantitative Easing this raises the supply of Euro's in circulation (its printing money). The Germans always have in their minds the hyperinflation of the 1920's caused by printing money and the post-war Deutchmark which was managed so well that inflation was only an issue after the costs of unification with East Germany. They don't want the ECB to start a potentially inflationary process.
Most people disagree with the Germans. They see the need to save the Euro as far greater than the risk of inflation. They also point out that the Germans can only be right when the rate of rise in the money supply is faster than the rate of rise in real output. So far in this period of instability monetary growth has been sluggish and over the period 2009 - 10 the money supply would have fallen but for central bank action. The graphic at the top is a little small but shows M1 and M3 growth in the EU.
It is clear that if the ECB does not act and the Italian government does not change then the danger of a collapse in the Euro is imminent.
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