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sailingaway
03-21-2013, 01:19 PM
http://libertycrier.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/cyprus-crisis.jpg


ATMs in Cyprus were drained over the weekend, electronic transfers were halted, and riots ensued following a decision by European Union chiefs to raid private savings accounts to help pay for the country’s $13 billion bailout. It was believed that there were plans to stretch a bank holiday to at least one week, while the exact measures were decided upon. However, yesterday the Cypriot parliament rejected the scheme outright, leading many to speculate that this would be the start of something even worse.

Sure enough, much like the U.S. Federal Reserve threatened martial law and blood in the streets if Congress didn’t accept sweeping bailouts in 2008, now Germany is saying that Cypriot banks might never reopen after parliament’s decision:


Germany’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble said major Cypriot banks were “insolvent if there are no emergency funds,” according to a BBC report, meaning savers might lose all their money if no deal was reached. (Source) There is extreme worry that if the banks do reopen, capital flight is all but assured. Meanwhile, similar confiscation schemes are being proposed for Italy and New Zealand (more on that below), spurring questions about which other nations are in line for a “haircut” . . . perhaps better called “the chopping block.”


Whether or not Cyprus gets its bailout in one form or another — perhaps from Russia — this is a precedent-setting crisis that is already leading to such a level of distrust in Cyprus that merchants are even refusing credit card payments. This is indeed shaping up to be a potential “Lehman Brothers Moment” with ramifications that could extend even beyond the troubled nations of Europe.



more and internal links: http://libertycrier.com/finance/update-germany-warns-that-banks-in-cyprus-may-remain-closed-permanently/

Zippyjuan
03-21-2013, 01:45 PM
Russia is offering help (the bailout amount is really quite small compared to other countries- $13 billion) in exchange for access to their energy resources (Cyprus has lots of natural gas for one). Britain flew in millions in cash to their soldiers there so they would have money to spend on things.

ctiger2
03-21-2013, 01:49 PM
http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2013/3/21_Sinclair_-_Lagardes_IMF_Disaster_Forces_Bernanke_Out_Of_Fed. html

http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2013/3/21_Cyprus_Crisis_Escalates_-_Banks_May_Remain_Closed_For_Weeks.html

sailingaway
03-21-2013, 01:51 PM
Russia is offering help (the bailout amount is really quite small compared to other countries- $13 billion) in exchange for access to their energy resources (Cyprus has lots of natural gas for one). Britain flew in millions in cash to their soldiers there so they would have money to spend on things.

Yeah, that would be selling out the people too, though. It is a shame, all around.

Zippyjuan
03-21-2013, 02:15 PM
They are also considering donations (their Orthodox Church has offered some help) or raiding pension funds.


The "Plan B" will likely include restructuring Cyprus' troubled banks, some form of Russian help, dipping into pension funds and taking up an offer from Cyprus' wealthy Orthodox church to contribute. Some form of tax on bank deposits is also possible.

One new development Thursday was the government's announcement of its intention to create a so-called "Investment Solidarity Fund." That bill and the bank restructuring bill were sent to Parliament Thursday night for discussion. It was unclear when there might be a vote.

The fund is intended to appeal to "the patriotism of Cypriots" and draw on contributions from ordinary Cypriots, businessmen and foreign investors, said Demetris Syllouris, head of a small right-wing party who was in a meeting with the president where the "Plan B" was being hashed out.

A "Plan B" is needed after lawmakers soundly defeated the earlier proposal to seize up to 10 percent of all domestic deposits to raise the 5.8 billion euros.

"We will have a program of support for Cyprus by Monday," Demetriades said earlier in the day.

One major lender, Bank of Cyprus, appealed to the government and politicians to reach a plan that the eurozone partners would accept, clearing the way for the bailout.

"The Cypriot economy is in a marginal and fragile state. The next move could prove salutary or disastrous," the bank said in a statement. "It is imperative we immediately proceed with the drawing up of an agreement with the Eurogroup."

Russia is likely to pitch in with the new plan, though its contribution will be smaller than originally hoped for, Cypriot officials have said. Nearly a third of the 68 billion euros ($88 billion) in deposits in Cyprus' oversized banking sector are held by Russians.


http://enews.earthlink.net/article/int?guid=20130321/f54cbb32-0c9d-4a99-a5fb-21833642f46f

itshappening
03-21-2013, 02:18 PM
Socialism always fails. I bet if you look closely CYPRUS is socialist and running huge deficits

Zippyjuan
03-21-2013, 02:28 PM
They do have a retirement program like Social Security but no National Health programs- everybody has to buy their own insurance. In 2010 their budget deficit was running four percent of GDP. http://cy.vlex.com/vid/cyprus-budget-summary-december-2010-239576667 Sorry- four percent was the TARGET. Still looking for other numbers.

Budget deficit running 6.3% of GDP of 1.1 billion euros. (compared to about nine percent for the US). GDP of $25 billion a year. Per-capita GDP about $30,000 a year.

itshappening
03-21-2013, 02:40 PM
I bet they have loads of government workers etc..