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We are in a more dangerous situation than in 2008: Soros

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BS Reporter Chennai/ Bangalore
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 1:39 AM IST

The ongoing sovereign-debt crisis in the Eurozone is much more serious than the global financial meltdown of 2008. If the European banks fail, it will have financial implications globally.if the current situation is not brought under control. The Euro zone faces a “draconian austerity” as a result of the measures it has employed to deal with the sovereign-debt problems.

That was the opinion of the well-known financier George Soros, the Hungarian-American business magnate, investor and philanthropist. He said, the last few years have done the most damage to the global markets, while delivering a lecture at Azim Premji Foundation in Bangalore on Monday.

The Eurozone crisis is much more serious than the housing market crisis in the US in 2008 and is a direct consequence of the US slowdown, said Soros who is known as “The Man Who Broke the Bank of England” because of his $1 billion in investment profits for his Quantum hedge fund during the 1992 Black Wednesday UK currency crisis. “This crisis reveals the weaknesses in the formation of the Euro,” he said, speaking on the crisis that has engulfed the Eurozone.

He believes that the crisis which is today primarily hitting Europe, can also impact the US. The Euro crisis is a direct consequence of the overuse of sovereign credit, said the chairman of the Soros Globalization and deregulation of financial markets went together.Also, markets don’t always trend towards equilibrium. It creates a boom-bust cycle.

He added that he finds solace in the rise in the surge for freedom and progress in the developing world. Soros supports progressive-liberal causes.

Growth will be negative in the developed world and will be slow in the develo-ping countries. He said growth rate in the developed world would decline going forward and stay positive in the developing world. Developing countries will be affected by the crisis but not as much as developed.

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He expounded on his theory of reflexivity, which is a stark diversion from the widely-held belief of ‘Market Fundamentalism’. Citing Karl Popper and his father as his influences, Soros went on to explain why market fundamentalism, the belief that a market without regulation ensures equitable distribution of resources was a flawed world view. Soros said that a market without regulation would often be exposed to crises, as seen in 2008 and the current Euro crisis.

Between 1979 and 2011, Soros gave away over $8 billion to human rights, public health, and education causes. He thought India was a fascinating country and increasingly important in the world. “I am long term optimistic about India,” Soros said.

He warned that financial markets have grown too big and too powerful in the world. “Regulation in the banking industry has not been very successful,” he added.

On his philanthropic initiatives, Soros said, “If I can contribute to making the world a better place, then that is good.” Soros advocates democracy across the world and had recently visited Myanmar in this context. Commenting on the political and economic decline of the developing world, Soros commended the developing world on the leaps they were making on both fronts.

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First Published: Jan 10 2012 | 12:34 AM IST

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