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TALKING POLITICS

Adam Tooze on the Crisis

TALKING POLITICS

Catherine Carr

News, News & Politics

4.72.5K Ratings

🗓️ 19 March 2020

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We talk to Adam Tooze in New York about the possible impact of coronavirus on the global financial and political system. How does this crisis compare to the financial crisis of 2008? What are the implications for the future of the Eurozone? And what have we learned already about the shift in power from the US to China? Plus we talk to Helen Thompson in London about how it intersects with the oil price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia. The first of a series of conversations about the biggest event of our times. **Updated overnight**


Talking Points: 


This crisis has revealed the fundamental weakness in the Eurozone. Lagarde’s initial comments re-exposed this fundamental faultline. 

  • The central question facing the ECB is ‘what is its role with regard to spreads?’ 
  • But over the course of the day, the panic in the markets seems to have led Frankfurt to reevaluate: they’ve come forward with a remarkable bond buying program steered towards buying both sovereign bonds and corporate debt.
  • The ECB is now saying that it will lift caps if necessary. This is an effort to take the sovereign risk for the Italians out of the equation and also relieve pressure on the French and the Spanish. 


The fundamental weakness in the Eurozone is one of the continuities, but no one really expected it to be exposed.

  • Italy wasn’t a causal driver of the crisis of 07/08, but it became collateral damage. It has not recovered. That failure is being exposed.
  • There are also novel elements, for example, the explosion of corporate debt since 2008. 
  • The Eurozone banks aren’t in great shape, but it’s better than ‘07/’08. The question is whether the Eurozone has the stomach for another round of collective efforts.


The inequities in the US health system are severe and will be exposed in this crisis.

  • The current crisis is happening on a much shorter timescale than ‘07/’08.
  • The impact on working life has been even more rapid.


The spread of this disease from China is not unusual but the ability of the Chinese government to bend this curve so quickly signals the power of state capacity.

  • Beijing’s fiscal and monetary stimulus in ‘08/09 should have been a wake up call. This was a key turning point.


What happened to oil prices? 

  • OPEC Plus broke down, in particular, the relationship between Russia and Saudi Arabia. 
  • The big question is the politics: the US shale industry can’t cope with prices this low. 
  • A lot of things that have been destabilizing over the last decade are crashing into each other right now.


Mentioned in this Episode: 


Further Learning: 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, my name's David Runciman and this is Talking Politics. I am in Cambridge. Helen Thompson is in London.

0:10.1

Adam Toos is in New York. The coronavirus is just about everywhere. We are going to start trying to put together some of the pieces of this giant puzzle.

0:23.2

Talking Politics is brought to you in partnership with the London Review of Books,

0:27.7

the only magazine willing to ask the questions that keep you awake at night,

0:31.9

and answer them to, even if it takes 10,000 words.

0:36.8

Is it okay to have a child in the age of climate crisis?

0:41.1

Where next for the coronavirus?

0:43.7

Was it a hermit crab that ate Amelia Earhart?

0:47.2

You know where to go.

0:49.1

Talking politics listeners get to subscribe for a world beating rate

0:53.0

using the URL, lrb.me.me slash talk.

0:58.7

They'll even send you a free copy of Sinomania writing about China from the London Review of

1:04.4

Books. Just go to lrb.mee.mee slash talk.

1:17.3

Like a lot of people, we're having to adjust our working practices and we're trying out some new equipment today that allows us to talk to people who aren't in the same room it's not

1:22.3

quite possible this time to get adam and helen together the sound quality is a little patchy in my conversation with

1:29.3

Adam. It gets better and it is fine with Helen, so do stick with it. I am as keen as I know

1:36.2

many of our regular listeners are to know what Adam Toos and Helen Thompson think about what's

1:42.7

going on at the moment. it's almost impossible to know

1:46.5

where to start. There is so much we could talk about and we will try and talk about a lot and

1:51.2

we will come back to this. I promise you. Adam, when we talk to you previously on this podcast,

1:57.7

we've often started with Italy. It's the being the weak link in the Eurozone

2:03.6

and it's posed a threat to the stability of European politics.

...

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