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The Bankruptcy Of The Planet Accelerates: 24 Nations Are Currently Facing A Debt Crisis

By Michael Snyder

Global Currencies Storm

There has been so much attention on Greece in recent weeks, but the truth is that Greece represents only a very tiny fraction of an unprecedented global debt bomb which threatens to explode at any moment.  As you are about to see, there are 24 nations that are currently facing a full-blown debt crisis, and there are 14 more that are rapidly heading toward one.  Right now, the debt to GDP ratio for the entire planet is up to an all-time record high of 286 percent, and globally there is approximately 200 TRILLION dollars of debt on the books.  That breaks down to about $28,000 of debt for every man, woman and child on the entire planet.  And since close to half of the population of the world lives on less than 10 dollars a day, there is no way that all of this debt can ever be repaid.  The only “solution” under our current system is to kick the can down the road for as long as we can until this colossal debt pyramid finally collapses in upon itself.

As we are seeing in Greece, you can eventually accumulate so much debt that there is literally no way out.  The other European nations are attempting to find a way to give Greece a third bailout, but that is like paying one credit card with another credit card because virtually everyone in Europe is absolutely drowning in debt.

Even if some “permanent solution” could be crafted for Greece, that would only solve a very small fraction of the overall problem that we are facing.  The nations of the world have never been in this much debt before, and it gets worse with each passing day.

According to a new report from the Jubilee Debt Campaign, there are currently 24 countries in the world that are facing a full-blown debt crisis

■ Armenia

■ Belize

■ Costa Rica

■ Croatia

■ Cyprus

■ Dominican Republic

■ El Salvador

■ The Gambia

■ Greece

■ Grenada

■ Ireland

■ Jamaica

■ Lebanon

■ Macedonia

■ Marshall Islands

■ Montenegro

■ Portugal

■ Spain

■ Sri Lanka

■ St Vincent and the Grenadines

■ Tunisia

■ Ukraine

■ Sudan

■ Zimbabwe

And there are another 14 nations that are right on the verge of one…

■ Bhutan

■ Cape Verde

■ Dominica

■ Ethiopia

■ Ghana

■ Laos

■ Mauritania

■ Mongolia

■ Mozambique

■ Samoa

■ Sao Tome e Principe

■ Senegal

■ Tanzania

■ Uganda

So what should be done about this?

Should we have the “wealthy” countries bail all of them out?

Well, the truth is that the “wealthy” countries are some of the biggest debt offenders of all.  Just consider the United States.  Our national debt has more than doubled since 2007, and at this point it has gotten so large that it is mathematically impossible to pay it off.

Europe is in similar shape.  Members of the eurozone are trying to cobble together a “bailout package” for Greece, but the truth is that most of them will soon need bailouts too

All of those countries will come knocking asking for help at some point. The fact is that their Debt to GDP levels have soared since the EU nearly collapsed in 2012.

Spain’s Debt to GDP has risen from 69% to 98%. Italy’s Debt to GDP has risen from 116% to 132%. France’s has risen from 85% to 95%.

In addition to Spain, Italy and France, let us not forget Belgium (106 percent debt to GDP), Ireland (109 debt to GDP) and Portugal (130 debt to GDP).

Once all of these dominoes start falling, the consequences for our massively overleveraged global financial system will be absolutely catastrophic

Spain has over $1.0 trillion in debt outstanding… and Italy has €2.6 trillion. These bonds are backstopping tens of trillions of Euros’ worth of derivatives trades. A haircut or debt forgiveness for them would trigger systemic failure in Europe.

EU banks as a whole are leveraged at 26-to-1. At these leverage levels, even a 4% drop in asset prices wipes out ALL of your capital. And any haircut of Greek, Spanish, Italian and French debt would be a lot more than 4%.

Things in Asia look quite ominous as well.

According to Bloomberg, debt levels in China have risen to levels never recorded before…

While China’s economic expansion beat analysts’ forecasts in the second quarter, the country’s debt levels increased at an even faster pace.

Outstanding loans for companies and households stood at a record 207 percent of gross domestic product at the end of June, up from 125 percent in 2008, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

And remember, that doesn’t even include government debt.  When you throw all forms of debt into the mix, the overall debt to GDP number for China is rapidly approaching 300 percent.

In Japan, things are even worse.  The government debt to GDP ratio in Japan is now up to an astounding 230 percent.  That number has gotten so high that it is hard to believe that it could possibly be true.  At some point an implosion is coming in Japan which is going to shock the world.

Of course the same thing could be said about the entire planet.  Yes, national governments and central banks have been attempting to kick the can down the road for as long as possible, but everyone knows that this is not going to end well.

And when things do really start falling apart, it will be unlike anything that we have ever seen before.  Just consider what Egon von Greyerz recently told King World News

Eric, there are now more problem areas in the world, rather than stable situations. No major nation in the West can repay its debts. The same is true for Japan and most of the emerging markets. Europe is a failed experiment for socialism and deficit spending. China is a massive bubble, in terms of its stock markets, property markets and shadow banking system. Japan is also a basket case and the U.S. is the most indebted country in the world and has lived above its means for over 50 years.

So we will see twin $200 trillion debt and $1.5 quadrillion derivatives implosions. That will lead to the most historic wealth destruction ever in global stock, with bond and property markets declining at least 75 – 95 percent. World trade will also contract dramatically and we will see massive hardship across the globe.

So what do you think is coming, and how bad will things ultimately get once this global debt crisis finally spins totally out of control?

The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of EMerging Equity.


Courtesy of The Economic Collapse Blog, © 2015 The Economic Collapse

Discussion

9 thoughts on “The Bankruptcy Of The Planet Accelerates: 24 Nations Are Currently Facing A Debt Crisis

  1. If everybody had borrowed who lent the money?

    Like

    Posted by Kowshik Devarajan | July 23, 2015, 1:33 pm
  2. What do you do at microeconomic level at households? One try to live within the means. However, at international level, one can declare bankruptcy and write off debts. After all, it’s just a number! Barter system will start all over again.

    Liked by 1 person

    Posted by Hemant Panchpor | July 27, 2015, 3:00 am
  3. Admitted that most Nations listed above cant pay back the debt, It doesn’t make sense to continue is to grow the debt and make it worse. To Delay is to make it harder.

    Basics of Banking when bankrupt you sell the remaining assets and shut id down the operation that got into difficulty. To continue is supporting those that made it go wrong.

    Banks That are involved new the risks they were taking, depositors are protected to a certain extent or should be, The management should not continue, Directors have failed in there obligation, Share holders made a bad investment. And what happened to the regulators? Accountability?

    Should those who created this mess continue

    A Bail out means giving money for doing it wrong. Sorry to me thats not right. If the Euro needs a Hair Cut then it needs to be done, The system will survive. simply capitalize new banks and buy out the assets of the defunct at fair value.

    True we will go into systemic chaos but it will come out stronger and better. Better that then to be held Hostage to debt slavery.

    Like

    Posted by gihann | July 28, 2015, 2:47 am
  4. This “doomsday’ scenario has been predicted by many people, some of them serious economists. As far back in 2005 an analyst in Goldman Sachs predicted the bond ratings of top five key economies to drop from triple A to junk in matter of 3 decades and we see his prediction playing as first US and the UK saw their bonds drop a notch down. The question here is what is so wrong in deficit financing when everyone is doing the same? I mean one is economically weaker only when the neighbour is relatively rich. Here we all are sitting on this massive pile of horse manure we call the greenback. Since everyone is sitting on ones own pile its basically a bid fat, FLAT table and such tables do not collapse. It is only such smaller countries whose currencies have no value and cant just pay the loan out by printing more are the ones that are going to collapse economically – on and off. I mean this economy of ours, the global economy grows about 3 % p.a and is growing like this since modern times for some 200 years.That means it is doubling in every 24 years and in every 100 years it grows 20 times! I dont think this will change. I discussed this deeply in my book “Out of Aces? Fifty Steps to FINANCIAL ACUITY.”

    Like

    Posted by Vicky | July 30, 2015, 2:27 am
  5. No surprise… One world order…one world monetary… Its biblical… But that’s too simple of an answer for the masses.

    Like

    Posted by Bob | August 14, 2015, 12:50 am
  6. Reblogged this on Effective Innovation and commented:
    Interested to see what can be done with innovation in finance at a microeconomic level.

    Like

    Posted by effectiveinnovation | August 16, 2015, 10:52 am

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