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"A major and timely contribution to a national debate that will only get more heated in the years ahead."
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#whburning- "@justinwolfers: Romney will "finance a massive tax cut by cutting Medicaid..."- @ezraklein http://t.co/74lS2lit"; He is #whburning /SJ baselinescene (Baseline Scenario)
- Santorum profile: http://t.co/PdV2Osdi via @WSJ, but his fiscal plans would move US debt to Greek levels, #whburning baselinescene (Baseline Scenario)
- Paul Singer: "these countries are insolvent, with no hope of paying presently promised benefits," http://t.co/JHLMzxcX #whburning /SJ baselinescene (Baseline Scenario)
- Party of Higher Debts #whburning http://t.co/2VQo5rZV baselinescene (Baseline Scenario)
- RT @baselinescene: @crampell primer on tax breaks: http://t.co/895kiVEq. #whburning goes after 7 of the top 10 in her list. /JK BondBuyerJen (Jen DePaul)
- @crampell primer on tax breaks: http://t.co/895kiVEq. #whburning goes after 7 of the top 10 in her list. /JK baselinescene (Baseline Scenario)
- looking forward to this one rt “@baselinescene: What Is This White House Burning? #whburning http://t.co/kcwOLQga” andrewpowens (Andrew Owens)
- RT @baselinescene: What Is This White House Burning? #whburning http://t.co/PmFHOsLv michpols (michpols)
- RT @baselinescene: What Is This White House Burning? #whburning http://t.co/KoLJ0ugX JDreport (JDreport)
- What Is This White House Burning? #whburning http://t.co/PmFHOsLv baselinescene (Baseline Scenario)
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European Debt: The Big Picture
By Simon Johnson
For everyone struggling to get their arms around the debt crisis in Europe, Bill Marsh in today’s New York Times offers literally a compelling picture, with graphic illustration for the key issues.
The picture is big, 18×21 inches. Either you need a very large computer screen or a hard copy of the paper (pp. 6-7 in the SundayReview section, “It’s All Connected: A Spectator’s Guide to the Euro Crisis).
The main debt linkages across borders for which we have data are all here – and the graphic pulls your eye appropriately to the centrality of Italy in whatever happens next. (On why eurozone policy towards Italy now matters so much – and what are the options – see my recent paper with Peter Boone, “Europe on the Brink”.)
But you might think also about what is not in the NYT graphic because we lack reliable information. For example, what is the exposure of US financial institutions to European debt, directly or indirectly, through derivatives transactions of any kind?
The opaqueness of derivative markets means that most investors can only guess at what could happen. Most of the relevant regulators and supervisors with whom I have talked seem also to be largely in the dark – remember the experience of AIG in 2008.
Cross-border bank exposures through loans and other holdings are publicly disclosed – data from the Bank for International Settlements are represented by the arrows in the NYT graphic. These data are surely not perfect, but they do convey the main points and they tell you where to focus attention.
Why do we not require publication of similar data, preferably by financial institution, for all derivative transactions – including both gross and supposedly net exposures across borders?
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