George Soros Posts 818-Word Takedown Of Rival In The Comments Section Of A Blog Post

George Soros
George Soros

REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski

A few weeks ago, billionaire financier George Soros gave Germany a policy ultimatum : he said the country ought to agree to "Eurobonds" – which would mutualize the public debts of euro area member states – or leave the common currency so that the remaining member states could proceed to introduce Eurobonds together, thus effectively ending the euro crisis.

Soros's speech is the subject of German economist Hans-Werner Sinn's latest piece for Project Syndicate: "Should Germany Exit the Euro?"

Sinn argues that Germany should neither accept Eurobonds nor exit the euro. In short, peripheral countries should continue to undergo austerity:

From this perspective, the crisis countries would not be spared painful retrenchment as long as they remained in a monetary union that includes competitive countries. The only way to avoid it would be for them to exit the euro and devalue their new currencies. But, so far, they have not been willing to go this route...

Thus, the only remaining option, as unpleasant as it may be for some countries, is to tighten budget constraints in the eurozone. After years of easy money, a way back to reality must be found. If a country is bankrupt, it must let its creditors know that it cannot repay its debts. And speculators must take responsibility for their decisions, and stop clamoring for taxpayer money whenever their investments turn bad.

In the comments section, George Soros dropped an 818-word response to Sinn's critique of the speech.

" Hans-Werner Sinn has deliberately distorted and obfuscated my argument," he begins, and proceeds to argue that if Germany accepts Eurobonds, it could "work wonders" in healing peripheral economies by allowing them to undertake tough structural reforms in a more benign environment.

On the other hand, if Germany continues to reject them, Soros says weakness in the peripheral economies will eventually drag Germany down too, as the latest economic data releases seem to be hinting at.

George Soros's response to Hans-Werner Sinn is included below.

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Hans-Werner Sinn has deliberately distorted and obfuscated my argument. I was arguing that the current state of integration within the eurozone is inadequate: the euro will work only if the bulk of the national debts are financed by Eurobonds and the banking system is regulated by institutions that create a level playing field within the eurozone.

Allowing the bulk of outstanding national debts to be converted into Eurobonds would work wonders. It would greatly facilitate the creation of an effective banking union, and it would allow member states to undertake their own structural reforms in a more benign environment. Countries that fail to implement the necessary reforms would become permanent pockets of poverty and dependency, much like Italy’s Mezzogiorno region today.