Following his embarrassing brush with U.S. CEO Maurice Taylor, French Industry Minister Arnaud Montebourg has turned to the devaluation of the euro as a means of saving France’s battered economy.
No, really.
“France’s industry minister Tuesday called for a lower euro and said the European Central Bank’s [ECB] role should be reinterpreted, wading back into a currency debate that had been calmed by an agreement between the world’s top finance ministers earlier in the month to refrain from competitive devaluations of their currencies,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“I am for a less-strong euro,” Montebourg said Tuesday, adding that it is “good news” the euro has declined against other currencies.
As noted in the WSJ report, the euro has fallen about 4.6 percent against the U.S. dollar since February:
“I am very happy, [the decline] should continue,” Montebourg added.
The report continues:
Earlier this year, French officials complained about the euro being too strong and making the country’s exports less competitive. In a speech to the EU parliament in early February, French President Francois Hollande said the euro shouldn’t be left to fluctuate according to the mood of the markets and warned that a strong euro wipes out efforts to make economies more competitive.
However, later in February, finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of 20 industrial and emerging countries agreed they would refrain from competitive devaluation and would not target exchange rates for competitive purposes. That commitment has reduced the number of comments from European politicians on the euro and the ECB.
Indeed, as noted here, here, and here on TheBlaze, world leaders have been warning against an escalation in “competitive devaluation.”
Still, the industry minister also said Tuesday the role of the European Central Bank should be reinterpreted. The Frankfurt based institution’s primary mandate is to fight inflation, but Mr. Montebourg said that within the current European treaties the ECB can be more pragmatic and less dogmatic. It should act more like other major central banks, which Mr. Montebourg said had monetized debt.
“There are efforts to be made to bring order to public finances, but thinking that the entire effort should come from taxes and spending cuts is excessive,” Montebourg said.
“We should share part of the effort with the monetization of debt, which is natural because it is directly linked to the errors of the banking industry which the central bank did not sufficiently monitor in the past,” he added.
Final Thought: So this is Montebourg’s solution for repairing the French economy?
Seriously, has union protectionism really gotten to the point where an Industry Minister is more willing to call for the devaluation of his own currency than a review of the type of contracts that made a deal with Maurice Taylor impossible?
Wait, don’t answer that.
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NigelTufnel
Mar. 1, 2013 at 11:24amIt’s the US that has been bending Europe over the stump with our money printing keeping the euro-high and challenging their exports. The EU should let their currency alone and focus on building trade with Southeast Asia which is the future of this century. Forget about selling your wares to Americans.
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NoMoMrNiceGuy
Mar. 1, 2013 at 7:49amHang on kids its going to get bumpy !
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ForMyKidsVA
Feb. 28, 2013 at 11:00pmIt’s a race to the bottom. Which country will be the first domino?
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UBETHECHANGE
Feb. 28, 2013 at 6:37pm“We should share part of the effort with the monetization of debt, which is natural because it is directly linked to the errors of the banking industry which the central bank did not sufficiently monitor in the past,”
Mr. Montebourg is a Soros plant.
Soros in 2012: “This happened because they transferred their seigniorage rights to the ECB [European Central Bank]. That’s why they can’t print their own money. And because they can’t print their own money, there is a real danger that they would default.”
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msjoe43
Feb. 28, 2013 at 6:25pmU.S. CEO Goes Off on France’s Work Ethic in Epic Letter: ‘Lazy’ Union Workers Who Talk Too Much
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/20/u-s-ceo-goes-off-on-frances-work-ethic-in-epic-letter-lazy-workers-who-talk-too-much/
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SpeakSoftlyAndCarry
Feb. 28, 2013 at 6:08pmThe thing that really frightens me is that the morons in our Federal Reserve and the Obama administration will get sucked into a currency devaluation war that will wipe out the savings of U.S. citizens. The best way to deal with countries who artificially deflate their currency is to slap high import duties on their goods in order to offset the currency value manipulation. This way they can’t undercut goods made in countries that trade fairly!
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Vision Harry
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:52pmI’m betting he’s got his own money in US backed securities.
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joseyiscute
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:49pm“We should share part of the effort with the monetization of debt, which is natural because it is directly linked to the errors of the banking industry which the central bank did not sufficiently monitor in the past,” he added.
Hey Monte! Isn’t this the way that the Weimar bunch went? How’d that hyperinflation from monetizing their debt work out??
Oh wait, that’s right, a World War broke out. Did the central bank “sufficiently monitor” that ?
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UBETHECHANGE
Feb. 28, 2013 at 6:46pmSoros on inflation, “Maybe the currency will lose its value—or some part of its value, but they can always print the money that’s necessary to repay their debts.”
Or maybe, like Weimar, one could wind up with the worst of both worlds: hyperinflation and default.
Manufactured economic destruction brought to you by Soros and Co. Next stop Obama’s Amerika. Forward comrades!
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UNALIEN
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:18pmthe goal of currency devaluation is to import inflation and cut your debt,, a hidden tax on the poor and middle class,, the wealthy always benefit,,, but it is a loser game between nations,,, a race to the bottom
Global Currency Wars are ramping up… military wars often follow
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The_Jerk
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:36pmSo true.
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Leerm
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:36pmA good observation. And a possibility.
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UNALIEN
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:55pmin a currency war almost everybody loses when we are fn a global fiat system, when everyone devalues then there is nothing to devalue against… except hard assets and the wealthy asset owners are protected from the runaway inflation..
So the political and economic elites want a devaluation, you can get that by increasing the debt,, that is why the billionaires go socialist and promote socialist policies,,
socialism aka debt expansion benefits the wealthy asset owners by transferring wealth from the poor and middle class.. through the inflation mechanism
the idealist leftists are useful idiots aiding the very parasites that they think they are fighting against
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pissantno.10
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:15pmthere doing nothing more than what we are doing printing money and paying of there debit with junk money
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Lumen
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:08pmI still think French Fries are an abomination. Patriot Fries anyone?>
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AbrahamsSheepdog
Feb. 28, 2013 at 5:35pmRighto my friend. I think I may even have a Checkers, aka Rally’s “freedom” seasoned fries in freezer. Sell in freezer section at the store Sam Walton built most part hiself. On Customer service, the most important key in Everything. It’s like Empathy so rare for the widows & orphans and poor desperate. The world needs men of Courage.
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Cavallo
Feb. 28, 2013 at 4:52pmNo one in their right mind should want to do business in France unless you had no other choice. The business environment in France is horrid. It’s much easier to do business with the Commies in China than the Marxists in France.
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