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The EuroZone Profiteers: How European Bankers and Bureaucrats Brought the EuroZone to the Point of Collapse – Report
By Global Research News
Global Research, November 18, 2013
Corpwatch 13 November 2013
Url of this article:
https://www.globalresearch.ca/the-eurozone-profiteers-how-european-bankers-and-bureaucrats-brought-the-eurozone-to-the-point-of-collapse-report/5358528

A new CorpWatch report shines a light on the role of six major banks in Greece, Ireland and Spain in the EuroZone crisis. “The EuroZone Profiteers” profiles Commerzbank, Depfa and Westdeutsche Landesbank from Germany; Crédit Agricole and Société Générale from France; together with Dexia – a Franco-Belgian financial institution.

There has been much debate among economists on how the creation of the Euro without supportive infrastructure like a banking union triggered the economic crisis in Europe. This report will add to that discussion by analyzing how these banks helped fuel the credit boom in the EuroZone before the property bubble burst, first in the U.S. and then across the Atlantic, leaving borrowing countries deep in debt. Over the last two decades, banks across Europe have come under increasing pressure to compete internationally – from bureaucrats like Mario Monti, the former by European Union Competition Commissioner, who mistakenly believed that greater efficiency would be the result. As Germany withdrew state guarantees for regional banks and France privatized nationalized banks, these banks took advantage of their high credit ratings to flock to countries on the periphery of the EuroZone with cheap and easy loans after the launch of the single currency.

Countries like Greece, Ireland and Spain who had struggled with high interest rates and unemployment for decades, jumped at this opportunity. The ensuing cash influx created an economic bubble characterized by a boom in risky public and private sector projects.

CorpWatch cartoon by Khalil Bendib (right)

When borrowing countries were unable to pay back their debts, international lenders put the blame for the economic crisis on lazy workers, bloated social services, and unwise borrowings by foolish governments. In return for financial support, these lenders required that the borrowers impose ‘austerity’ which cut social-spending “luxuries” such as school books and subsidized health care in order to generate savings to pay off the loans.

“Wealthy countries and international lenders claim that the recent bailouts rescued rash and wasteful borrowers in Greece, Ireland and Spain. In reality, they were often repaying foolish loans that Belgian, French and German banks made in an effort to pump up their own profits which helped cause the crisis in the first place,” says Pratap Chatterjee, executive director of CorpWatch. “ ‘The EuroZone Profiteers’ is intended to raise serious questions about the role of European bankers and bureaucrats in bringing the EuroZone to the point of collapse.”

A PDF of the report is available at:

https://s3.amazonaws.com/corpwatch.org/downloads/EuroZoneProfiteers.pdf

Press Contact: Pratap Chatterjee +1 202 580 8393, “pratap AT corpwatch.org”

The EuroZone Profiteers

Summary

Introduction

• Welcome to the Casino
• Who Owes Whom?

German Banking: Parochial and Overbanked, or Small Is Beautiful? 

• Westdeutsche Landesbank: A Jumbo with Engines on Fire and Nowhere to Land
• Depfa and Hypo Real Estate: One-Eyed Man Becomes King in the Land of the Blind
• Commerzbank: Property Lending Can Be a Mug’s Game 

French Banking: Less State = Less Happiness

• Société Générale: Arrived with a Swagger, Brought Down by a Gamble 
• Crédit Agricole: Ready to Forget Cautious Lessons About Banking
• Dexia: Using Public Funds to Support a Casino

Lending Frenzy 

• Spain: An Airport Without Planes, and the Never-Ending Property Boom 
• Greece: Of Disappearing Debt and Illegal Loans 
• Ireland: From Miraculous Beast to Failed Civilization 

Conclusion

• Odious Debt 
• Time to Investigate the Bankers and Bureaucrats 

Disclaimer: The contents of this article are of sole responsibility of the author(s). The Centre for Research on Globalization will not be responsible for any inaccurate or incorrect statement in this article.