What's left to trust in the world of money?
America's inability to address its fiscal challenges – Sunday night's "bipartisan    debt deal" offers only a temporary, sticking plaster solution – has    raised afresh an old conundrum.  
If even US Treasuries are now regarded as a credit risk, is there anything    left at all in the world of money that can be trusted?
The answer to this question is almost certainly no, but far from being a    calamitous conclusion to reach, this might be viewed as a positive    development which will in time restore market disciplines to a global    monetary system which became based on make believe.
In fact, the idea of the sovereign as a "risk free asset" is a    comparatively recent development which has no basis in historical    experience. Even in a country such as Britain with no history of default    (we'll ignore the case of war loans, which is arguable), government bonds    have hardly proved a reliable form of investment.
True enough, coupons have been paid and maturities honoured, but the currency    and inflation risks have proved extreme. On any medium to long term view,    you would have done much better out of property and equities.
Among members of the eurozone, the concept of the sovereign as a safe haven    asset is an even shorter lived phenomenon. The widening of spreads we've    seen in the past year and a half of financial crisis is as nothing compared    to the way it was before the single currency was launched.  
Those countries with weak governance were punished for their lack of    competitiveness with high interest rates and repeated currency crises. It    was a brutal, but reasonably effective form of discipline.
But once the euro had been established, all countries, bad as well as good,    came to enjoy the same low interest rates that Germany had earned from years    of hair shirted fiscal rectitude. Bond yields converged not because anyone    believed the single currency's fiscal rules would make all countries like    Germany, but because markets expected that countries which got themselves    into difficulties would be bailed out. They have so far been proved entirely    correct in this assumption.
Peer group pressure The abolition of sovereign currencies removed the pressures that markets    normally exert on governments to take unpopular, austerity measures. Market    disciplines were replaced by peer group pressure from European finance    ministers, only a few of whom were in any position to lecture their    colleagues on sound financial policies. Once even Germany started to break    the rules, the game was up.
All this was brilliantly predicted by 
Norman Lamont, a former 
UK Chancellor in    the chapter 
Why I am Against the Single Currency from his book 
In    Office, published nearly twelve years ago.
Increasingly tortuous attempts to prevent wide scale default fail to    acknowledge the underlying reality; membership of the single currency has    allowed some countries to borrow far in excess of their ability ever to    repay.
But it is not all the fault of the euro. Risk compression was a worldwide    phenomenon during the boom. In the hunt for yield, investors became    oblivious to the dangers. By the end, almost everything was regarded as    entirely risk free. 
Credit rating agencies were corrupted into the process    by giving top notch ratings to fundamentally unsafe assets. These judgements    then became embedded in regulatory requirements and central bank collateral    rules, making everything seem safer than it really was.
 Sovereign downgradesToday, the rating agencies are accused of deepening the debt crisis with    repeated sovereign downgrades, but if anything, their pronouncements    understate the reality. Their discomfort is nowhere more apparent than with    US sovereign debt. Even assuming the latest settlement – which envisages a    $2.1trillion (£1.3 trillion) fiscal consolidation over ten years – is    ratified, it's not enough to put public debt back on a sustainable    trajectory.
It's perfectly true that relative to GDP, US sovereign debt has been far    higher than it is today, but in the past America has been able to rely on    fast growth and demilitarisation to return borrowing to tolerable levels.    Neither of these things seem likely to come to the rescue this time around.
When 
Standard & Poor's placed the US on negative watch last month, it    suggested that a consolidation of perhaps as much as $4 trillion would be    required to safeguard the nation's triple A rating.
Heading for a downgrade Implicitly, then, America is heading for a downgrade regardless of the fact    that the immediate threat of default has been removed. Will S&P have the    guts to go through with its threat? I'll believe it when I see it. Already S&P    has appeared to backtrack in evidence to Congress.
The major rating agencies enjoy an unhealthily cosy relationship with the    major sovereigns, and can usually be persuaded to do the "right thing"    in the interests of financial stability. As ever, sweeping the issue under    the carpet will only make the eventual crisis even worse.
But perhaps oddly, the immediate blow to America if the big agencies do decide    to downgrade is likely to be more psychological than real; it may not matter    too much for bond yields.
Despite loss of its triple A rating and central government debt in excess of    200pc of GDP, Japan continues to enjoy the lowest 
sovereign bond yields    anywhere in the world.
This apparent paradox is explained by the fact that when there is generalised    risk aversion, where consumers are reluctant to spend and companies won't    invest, the consequent savings surplus tends to flow into the only place it    can – government debt.
Some of the same phenomenon is occurring in the US right now. Much as China    threatens to withdraw its support for the US dollar in protest at policies    which it thinks debase the currency, it really has no option but to continue    buying US Treasuries as long as it maintains such a big trade surplus with    the US. The capital surplus is merely the mirror image of the trade surplus.
Dominant reserve currency status in any case gives the US unrivalled access to    international borrowing. Dollar hegemony may not last for much longer, but    for the time being there are no viable alternatives. This is both a blessing and a curse for the US – a blessing because it allows    the country to keep borrowing at reasonable rates almost regardless of    underlying public debt dynamics, and a curse because it maintains the    addiction to debt.
If nothing is done, the façade will eventually break; that's the point at    which to run for the hills. Food, property, energy – these are the things    that retain value when money dies. - Telegraph
Govt debts – it’s time to stop fooling around
Plain Speaking - By Yap Leng Kuen
INDEBTEDNESS  has become an unsavoury word, especially when an important economy like  the 
United States faces potential default if its US$14.3 trillion debt  ceiling is not raised in time.
As at press time, an agreement was  reached on raising the debt limit; however, the uncertainty created  during the stalemate prior to the agreement had cast an element of doubt  in the markets over the long term viability of US 
Treasuries and a  possible downgrade of US' 
credit rating.
The debt ceiling has  been raised before; however, the severity of the problems faced by  Greece and other countries with high debt levels has caused the US  situation to be viewed with concern.
In fact, post-
2008 financial  crisis, government debt has become a major issue. In a research update,  
McKinsey Global Institute said while 
global debt and equity hit new  highs, more than a third of growth last year was government debt.
According  to McKinsey, the overall amount of global debt grew by US$5 trillion  last year, with global debt to 
gross domestic product (GDP) increasing  from 218% in 2000 to 266% in 2010.
Government bonds outstanding rose by US$4 trillion in 2010 while other forms of debt had mixed growth, said McKinsey.
The  move to downsize debt needs to be backed up by a concrete and  consistent plan that shows not just commitment but also conviction of  all parties involved.
Countries with high levels of debt must show that they are not only able to save others but also themselves.
Part  of a government's credibility lies in its ability to manage its  finances. Simply put, this involves lowering or containing its costs  while increasing revenue.
Much effort should be spent on plugging  the leakages while taking pains that taxpayers, who usually bear the  brunt of others' mistakes, are not disadvantaged.
Postponing the  problem by merely raising the limit for another time just makes matters  worse; the issue of indebtedness becomes more serious and future  governments end up inheriting the problem rather than spending  productive hours on new areas of growth.
To get the cooperation  of taxpayers to sacrifice for another round of austerity drive will  probably not be easy. They may question why they have to pay for the  excesses when they had already paid on previous bailouts for the big  boys.
It is therefore time to stop “fooling around” with the  finances and really get down to work on solid improvements. A  transparent approach with proper timelines that can be accessed by all  will certainly help.
Once people see something concrete coming up, they will be more convinced and committed towards the common goal.
Moreover, money allocated in a fair and equitable manner will result in better support from taxpayers.
  Associate editor Yap Leng Kuen recognises that managing a country is  far more complex than a family although the same dose of common sense is  required.