While not to be morbid about death or drowning - imagine 13 or 14, maybe even 20 people, all on a cruise ship and as a consequence of their intransigence on a number of issues, they watch as their ship hits a floating island, ruptures the hull and sinks, leaving the 13-20 people floating and bobbing about on the sea. Each person connected to the others by a lifeline, each buoyed by a life preserver thrown to them by people on the passing island as it floated away. Then imagine watching as the first person loses consciousness, while the others fight to take his life preserver off the limp body, watching as the body, half conscious and half lost to a possibility of being saved, sinks beneath the waves, engulfed by the darkness and quickly swallowed up by the abyss below. Watching as the first person pulled under, slowly begins pulling the next person under, while the remaining bobbing bodies argue about life preservers and how best to use them in the sea.
They cannot cut the line for any such severance ends for all time their precious European Union, so they remain tied to each other despite calls by several German financiers to do just that - sever ties to the sinking states, let them go under.
Greece is one example. A state that is in so many ways beyond redemption - it depends on the handouts from other EU states, but the other EU states are having their own share of economic woes only made worse by the billions loaned to Greece. Greece has gone under. Under the conditions of the bailout Greece received (or handout) certain requirements were enacted and signed off on - requirements to do and not do certain things. Greece has just admitted it sort of didn't do what was required by the EU bailout.
Greece has gone under and unlikely Germany will be willing to dump more billions into a black hole. Following Greece is Ireland - on the verge of sinking beneath the waves, swallowed up by the darkness ...
But the fun doesn't end there - Portugal (in my example of the survivors floating about on the sea) is tied to Ireland and is signalling it is about ready to surrender to the darkness. Spain is tied to Portugal.
I've got that sinking feeling ....
Oh oh that sinking feeling
that EU sinking feeling ...
Contagion hits Portugal as Ireland dithers on Rescue
The EU authorities have begun to vent their fury against Ireland over its refusal to accept a financial rescue, fearing that the crisis will engulf Portugal and Spain unless confidence is restored immediately to eurozone bond markets
November 15, 2010
The Telegraph
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Spain's central bank governor, Miguel Angel Ordonez, lashed out at Dublin on Monday, calling on the Irish government to halt the panic and take the "proper decision" of activating the EU-IMF bail-out mechanism.
"The situation in the markets has been very negative due to the lack of a final decision by Ireland. It is up to Ireland to take that decision, and I hope it does," he said.
The outburst reflected suspicion at the European Central Bank that Dublin is holding the eurozone to ransom, allowing the crisis to fester until it extracts a pledge from EU officials that it will not suffer a loss of economic sovereignty or be forced to give up its 12.5pc corporate tax rate under any deal.
Confused reports continued to swirl as Irish finance minister Brian Lenihan prepared to meet eurozone colleagues over dinner in Brussels on Tuesday night. Dublin has so far admitted to holding talks over "market conditions" with EU partners but insists that it is fully-funded until June and hopes to calm nerves with €6bn (£5.1bn )of budget cuts in early December.
Simon Derrick from the Bank of New York Mellon said the negotiations over Ireland's bail-out have been astonishing. "The creditors say please take the money, and the debtor says 'we don't want it'. It's very odd."
"Still, the EU is doing the right thing to try to create a fire-wall as quickly as possible. They learned from Greece that once bond yields reach this level they have 10 trading days left to avoid a self-feeding crisis. They cannot allow this to spread to a large country because at that point contagion would become uncontainable," he said.
Contagion has already pushed Portugal to the brink, pushing yields on 10-year bonds to the danger level above 6.5pc. Finance minister Fernado Teixeira dos Santos said the country was at the mercy of global forces and may be forced to call for help.
"The risk is high because we are not only facing a national or country problem. It is the problems of Greece, Portugal, and Ireland. Markets look at these economies because we are all in this together in the eurozone. Suppose we were not in the eurozone, the risk of contagion could be lower," he told the Financial Times.
Mr Teixeira made a thinly veiled attack on Germany's Angela Merkel and France's Nicolas Sarkozy, who precipitated the latest crisis by opening the door to sovereign defaults and bondholder "haircuts" for eurozone states in trouble.
"We were like the soccer player running to the goal and ready to kick for the goal, and then someone fouls us, but this time there was no penalty."
A simultaneous bail-out for both Ireland and Portugal might run to €200bn, depleting much of the EU rescue line. The European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) can raise up to €440bn on the bond markets but only two thirds of this would be available. The IMF is expected to loan a further €3 for every €8 from the EU under the bail-out formula.
The great concern is that the crisis could spread to Spain, which has a far bigger economy that Greece, Portugal, and Ireland combined. Foreign banks have €850bn of exposure to Spanish debt.
David Schautz, credit strategist at Commerzbank, said the EU bail-out fund would come under "severe strain" if Spain needed a rescue. Yet this remains a serious risk since Spain must roll over or raise €175bn of debt next year.
Mr Schautz said funds would become wary if yields on 10-year Spanish bonds rise much above 5pc, compared to 4.5pc at the moment. "Investors are nervous and panic can break out fast," he said.
Jose Manuel Campa, Spain's economy secretary, said his country is "neither Greece, nor Ireland, and never will be". Spain's economy has stalled again but public debt is still just 66pc of GDP, and both budget and current account deficits are falling fast.
The same cannot be said of Greece, where the debt crisis is going from bad to worse despite its €110bn rescue in April. Eurostat has revised Greece's debt from 115pc to 127pc of GDP last year, while the deficit was even worse than thought at 15.4pc. The debt will jump to 144pc of GDP this year, risking a debt-compound trap.
Premier George Papandreou said the country may ask for an extension of its debt repayment schedule, a move interpreted by investors as the start of a slippery slope towards default.
He accused Germany of pushing weaker EMU states over the edge by pressing for bondholder haircuts, saying Mrs Merkel's proposals had "created a spiral of higher interest rates for the countries in a difficult position. This could create a self-fulfilling prophecy. It is like saying to someone, 'since you have a difficulty, I will put an even higher burden on your back.' This could force economies towards bankruptcy," he said.
For Ireland, recourse to the EU or IMF would be traumatic, an unanswerable verdict on a Fianna Fail government that was still basking in glory of the Celtic Tiger just three years ago.
Mr Lenihan appears determined to dress up any rescue as a bail-out for banks rather than for the Irish sovereign state. This may not be easy. The ECB's vice president, Vitor Constancio, said the EFSF "cannot lend directly to banks: the facility lends to governments."
EU