Officials
Debate the Financial and Strategic Consequences of a Greek Exit
By STEPHEN
FIDLER
Updated
Feb. 5, 2015 5:16 p.m. ET
How much
does Greece matter to Europe ? It’s a question being asked by European officials
as the brinkmanship over the country’s bailout program intensifies.
The answer
is important because it will help determine how far governments will go to
accommodate the economic demands of new Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras,
and whether they will be willing to court an outcome that could lead Greece to leave
the euro and possibly the European Union.
For Winston
Churchill, Greece —“with its
immortal glories,” as he said in his “Iron Curtain” speech in Fulton , Mo. ,
in 1946—mattered for emotional and strategic reasons. As World War II drew to a
close, he sent British troops to fight against Communist guerrillas to prevent
the country from falling under Moscow ’s
domination.
When set
against the three million Allied soldiers fighting on the Western front and the
U.S. struggle against Japan , he wrote later, “The spasms of Greece
may seem petty, but [the Greeks] stood at the nerve center of power, law and
freedom in the Western world.”
It is the
same combination of emotion and perceived strategic importance that has over
the past 70 years led other European governments to ensure that Greece remained
tied to the West and the EU.
In recent
years, some policy makers—notably in Germany —have tired of this conceit.
Before German Chancellor Angela Merkel closed down the debate in 2012, some
German officials developed what others called the “ballast theory.” According
to this, Greece ’s
indiscipline was threatening to sink the eurozone boat. If Greece was
thrown over the side, the boat would float higher in the water.
At that
time, what gave Berlin
and others pause was the signal it would send. The eurozone, rather than a
permanent fixture, would look like a marriage of convenience that could be
joined and exited at will.
That would
carry high costs for other eurozone states, since investors would demand higher
interest rates to finance governments of vulnerable economies—rates that could
rise prohibitively high whenever there was a whiff of financial crisis. That
potential cost of a Greek exit remains, though analysts believe the immediate
financial fallout would likely be more limited than in 2012.
Over the
past year, however, another risk has emerged that may change the calculation:
the possibility that Russian President Vladimir Putin , who has challenged
Western norms by annexing Crimea and backing separatist rebels in Ukraine,
could step into the void and gain a hold in a Greece spurned by its European
neighbors.
Many Greeks
are traditionally sympathetic to their fellow Orthodox Christians in Russia ; perhaps Mr. Putin—who on Thursday
invited Mr. Tsipras to Moscow in May—can pull Athens closer to his
orbit.
In this
view, Greece is “an aircraft
carrier in the middle of the Mediterranean .”
Losing it is “unthinkable.”
For others,
while the financial consequences of Greece ’s exit from the euro may be
there, the strategic consequences are minimal. Sure, says Mr. Eyal , Greece
would have “a nuisance value” if it were let go. But he says it is already a
thorn in the side of its neighbors inside the EU, resisting settlements to disputes
over Cyprus , Macedonia and
other issues. The Greek political class has “never shown the solidarity that it
is asking others now to show,” he says.
Whatever
the truth, joining the euro has exposed the weaknesses of Greece ’s
political system, which is still managing to frustrate both its allies and its
own people.
The result
was Greece ’s
“clientelistic” political system—in which election winners deliver patronage to
their friends and family—that remains a central feature even today.
One
question European policy makers are asking is whether Mr. Tsipras represents a
break to that clientelistic tradition, or whether he will be guided by the
business-as-usual principle that “it’s our turn now.”
If the
former, its eurozone partners may be more inclined to accommodate Greek
requests provided the government signs up to meaningful reform. If the latter,
they may eventually be inclined to take the risk of casting it adrift.
Write to
Stephen Fidler at stephen.fidler@wsj.com
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