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Demigod
04-05-2012, 06:19 AM
In Europe every newspaper has been re posting this article some even naming it "The solution" while all this kid does is propose robbery. I did not know where to post it because there is no off-topic sub-forum so here it is :

http://business.financialpost.com/2012/04/03/how-greece-can-solve-its-debt-crisis-according-to-an-11-year-old-boy/





By Simon Kennedy

Greece should quit the euro, revive the drachma and slap penalties on those who try to avoid holding the new currency.

The analysis of a Wall Street economist or a secret plan hatched by European policy makers? No, it’s the proposal of an 11-year-old Dutch boy seeking the second-largest cash award in economics after the Nobel Prize.

Jurre Hermans of Breedenbroek, about 157 kilometers (98 miles) southeast of Amsterdam, was Tuesday awarded a 100-euro ($133) gift voucher for his effort to win the Wolfson Economics Prize aimed at finding ideas for how Europe can best enjoy economic progress even if a country leaves the single currency.

“I thought the Greek problems were too big and should be solved,” Hermans said in a telephone interview Tuesday with his father, Julius, translating. The crisis will continue because “Greece still has too many debts,” he said.


His proposal, complete with a drawing that includes a sad Greek person, see image below, suggested Greece leave the euro and force its citizens to use an “exchange machine” to transfer their euros into drachmas. The euros would then be used by the government to pay back its euro-denominated debts, with Hermans using pizza in an analogy to illustrate his idea.

Slice of Pizza

“Everyone who has a debt gets a slice of the pizza,” the boy, who was 10 when he entered the competition, wrote in his submission. “You see that all these euros in the pizzas go the companies and banks who have given loans in Greece.”

Realizing consumers and companies may balk at holding the new drachma because it “will lose its value dramatically,” Hermans said those trying to retain euros will “get a penalty just as high or double as the whole amount in euros he tried to hide!!!”





“In this way I ensure that all Greeks bring their euros to a Greek bank and so the Greek government can pay back all the debts,” he wrote. “Of course, if a country has paid back all his debts, he can return to the eurozone.”

In suggesting Greece quit the single currency after more than two years of crisis-fighting, Hermans aligned himself with economists including Nobel laureate Paul Krugman and Nouriel Roubini of Roubini Global Economics LLC. He wrote in his page- long submission that he loved animals and playing with his five friends. He hopes to be a zoo director when he grows up.

Shortlist

His proposal, one of 425 entries, wasn’t enough to secure a position on the five-strong shortlist for the prize, the winner of which will get almost 200,000 pounds (US$320,280). Roger Bootle of Capital Economics Ltd. and Nomura Holdings Inc.’s Jens Nordvig were among those named as finalists. The shortlist also includes Neil Record of Record Currency Management, Jonathan Tepper of Variant Perception and Cathy Dobbs, a private trader. A winner will be declared on July 5.

“Sadly, the risk of a country leaving the euro zone has not gone away,” Simon Wolfson, chief executive officer of retailer Next Plc, whose family trust is sponsoring the award, said in a statement. “The ideas contained in these entries are an invaluable contribution to tackling this important issue.”

Bootle, the founder of London-based Capital, and colleagues proposed countries accept devaluation as part of the crisis solution and embrace it sooner rather than later. Dobbs focused on preventing capital flight by ensuring equal treatment of bond contracts.

Nordvig, a managing director of currency research at Nomura in New York, and Nick Firoozye, head of interest-rate strategy at Nomura, argued that the key will be addressing 10-trillion euros of foreign debt. Record advocated a German-led taskforce prepare a plan in secret to abandon the euro once any member leaves it. Tepper said currency zones break up all the time and what matters is the reason a nation wants to leave.

thoughtomator
04-05-2012, 06:35 AM
name him to head the ECB, he's smarter than the guys now running it

FindLiberty
04-05-2012, 06:41 AM
Is it too late to suggest 22carat Ron Paul coins for a stable Euro currency?

No need to coerce acceptance of real gold... Idiots could still use dead sparrows,
twigs or fiat paper if they could find someone else who wanted to accept them
as "money". Also, any of those three (or other non-gold) items are ideal to use
to pay Euro taxes, expand das Eurogubermint or finance der friggn' wars.

Keith and stuff
04-05-2012, 07:03 AM
In Europe every newspaper has been re posting this article some even naming it "The solution" while all this kid does is propose robbery. I did not know where to post it because there is no off-topic sub-forum so here it is :

Here you go, http://www.ronpaulforums.com/forumdisplay.php?275-Off-Topic

Pennsylvania
04-05-2012, 07:12 AM
Or they could just default. Life goes on

2young2vote
04-05-2012, 07:41 AM
Switching to a new currency isn't going to stop their spending problem. The true solution is to deregulate, decrease taxes, and decrease spending.

bultza
04-05-2012, 07:49 AM
This solution have a name.. In Argentina is called Corralito

enter`name`here
04-05-2012, 07:53 AM
Hermans said those trying to retain euros will “get a penalty just as high or double as the whole amount in euros he tried to hide!!!”

Ok and how does one enforce this? House to house searches for Euro's? What happens if the Greeks are able to sell enough of their Euro's on the black market that would emerge, that the government still fell short of paying its debts after the conversion? Print money to buy foreign exchange? Is there any data on the number of Euro's in Greece vs total government debt?

This "plan" is a recipe for hyperinflation and societal chaos. But what else can we expect from an 11 year old who learned keynesian economics through the public education system in Europe.

EDIT: As others have said the only true solution is to reduce spending to a point where it can be sustained by tax revenues. Paying the debt off means nothing if the government will simply rack up a new one.

bbartlog
04-05-2012, 09:59 AM
1) Default (for the sixth time in 200 years... one would think the lenders would learn)
2) Accept that no one is going to lend you money now, or at least not in the next twenty years
3) Balance the budget

Simple, if not easy. The problem is that this leaves no opportunity for banksters to get any action in Greece. Well, and it screws the people that loaned the Greek government money; but they should have known better, see item 1) above.

Ivash
04-05-2012, 10:07 AM
Or they could just default. Life goes on

They should not (only) default, but (also) restructure their existing debts.

I believe that if Greece left the Euro it wouldn't really ever recover, since the blow to its already extremely low population growth could end up being pretty serious. This blow would (obviously) come from a prolonged economic depression.

Titus
04-05-2012, 10:12 AM
To me, this plan is just bankruptcy.

1) Get the money together.
2) All debtors get a fractional piece of pizza.
3) Whatever money is there makes up this pizza.
4) Anything else has to be forgiven or the payment terms changed.
5) This is a basic simplified description of his plan and bankruptcy.

Bern
04-05-2012, 10:33 AM
What "crisis"?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zvl9N9GdraQ