
Ellen Brown
“To
some people, the European Central Bank seems like a fire department
that is letting the house burn down to teach the children not to play
with matches.”
So wrote Jack Ewing in the New York Times last week. He went on:
“The E.C.B. has a fire hose — its ability to print money. But the bank is refusing to train it on the euro zone’s debt crisis.
“The
flames climbed higher Friday after the Italian Treasury had to pay an
interest rate of 6.5 percent on a new issue of six-month bills . . . the
highest interest rate Italy has had to pay to sell such debt since August 1997 . . . .
“But there is no sign the E.C.B. plans a major response, like buying large quantities of the country’s bonds to bring down its borrowing costs.”
Why not? According to the November 28th Wall Street Journal,
“The ECB has long worried that buying government bonds in big enough
amounts to bring down countries' borrowing costs would make it easier
for national politicians to delay the budget austerity and economic
overhauls that are needed.”
As with the manufactured debt ceiling crisis in the United States,
the E.C.B. is withholding relief in order to extort austerity measures
from member governments—and the threat seems to be working. The same authors write:
“Euro-zone
leaders are negotiating a potentially groundbreaking fiscal pact . . .
[that] would make budget discipline legally binding and enforceable by
European authorities. . . . European officials hope a new agreement,
which would aim to shrink the excessive public debt that helped spark
the crisis, would persuade the European Central Bank to undertake more
drastic action to reverse the recent selloff in euro-zone debt markets.”
The Eurozone appears to be in the process of being “structurally readjusted” – the same process imposed earlier by the IMF on Third World countries. Structural
demands routinely include harsh austerity measures, government
cutbacks, privatization, and the disempowerment of national central
banks, so that there is no national entity capable of creating and
controlling the money supply on behalf of the people. The
latter result has officially been achieved in the Eurozone, which is
now dependent on the E.C.B. as the sole lender of last resort and
printer of new euros.