FEB 19,
2015 12:01 AM EST
By The
Editors
Bloomberg
Even by the
demanding standards of European dysfunction, the continuing standoff between Greece
and the other euro countries is impressive. On substance, the distance between
the two sides has narrowed almost to nothing -- yet the stalemate and the risk
of a new financial crisis drag on as if it were vast. The EU is staking the
future of its monetary union not on principles but on semantics.
Initially,
the new Greek government was at fault for making reckless election promises and
presenting these to its European Union partners as non-negotiable. It has since
climbed down a long way -- in particular, dropping its demand for big debt
write-downs. Now it wants a new bailout with softer terms and a temporary
arrangement to bridge the financing gap between the present deal and the new
one. Reportedly, it's even willing to call this bridge an
"extension."
With Germany 's government leading the demand for
strict propriety, Europe 's response has been
to say that the current program must be successfully concluded, perhaps with
some flexibility, before anything else can be discussed.
So here's
the puzzle. What's the difference between an extension that's a bridge to a new
program and an extension with flexibility pending agreement on a new program?
To the sane observer, too little to care. Yet because of this difference,
whatever it may be, the euro system threatens to break apart.
Funny,
isn't it, that Europe 's voters express growing
disenchantment with the whole project?
The
situation is all the more absurd because the details of any transitional
provisions don't much matter anyway. What's crucial are the terms of the new
longer-term agreement -- which the EU is refusing to discuss until Greece
capitulates.
The need
for a new deal isn't seriously disputed. The existing bailout imposed too tight
a fiscal squeeze, which held back growth. The country's debt burden therefore
failed to shrink as intended in relation to gross domestic product. The error
has been widely acknowledged, including by the International Monetary Fund (one
of the plan's architects) and by other EU governments.
Designing
new terms won't be easy, but the case for a gentler program is compelling.
Citizens of Greece
have already suffered greatly. Output is a quarter below its peak before the
crash and unemployment stands at 25 percent. The country's compliance with the
terms of the existing bailout, though far from total, has been impressive.
"Greece
has gone from having the weakest to the strongest cyclically-adjusted fiscal
position in the euro area in just four years," the IMF said last summer.
"This is an extraordinary achievement."
Extraordinary
to a fault. And an unamended extension of the existing program would leave Greece
committed to tightening fiscal policy even further over the next two years. In
the recent Greek election, voters rightly rejected this bleak prospect --
electing the left-wing government that the EU, IMF and European Central Bank (which
make up the so-called troika of economic supervisors) now find so infuriating.
The EU's
refusal to come to terms with Greece
-- to accept concessions short of unconditional surrender -- doesn't serve its
interests. There's no need for this impasse to end in disaster. If it does, Germany and its supporters will be more to blame
than Greece .
To contact
the senior editor responsible for Bloomberg View’s editorials: David Shipley at
davidshipley@bloomberg.net.
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