Marketwatch.com
By MATTHEW
LYNN
Published:
Feb 18, 2015 4:00 a.m. ET
Fighting
has flared up again in the Ukraine .
The Egyptians are sending soldiers into Libya as another North African
state collapses into chaos. The militants of Islamic State are spreading their
influence across the region. You’d think Barack Obama might have bigger foreign
policy issues to worry about than a small state of 10 million people on the
eastern edges of the Mediterranean .
But Greece may be
about to turn from a European into an American problem.
As the game
of brinkmanship between the radical Syriza government elected last month and
the European Union gets played out, it has become increasingly clear that both
sides may have a strong interest in the talks failing. The International
Monetary Fund looks to have abdicated all responsibility for fixing the mess.
But the U.S. , with the U.K.
perhaps in a subsidiary role, has an equally strong interest in a stable Greece . If a
crunch comes, America will
have no choice but to bail Greece
out. How? It may well need to extend emergency loans, prop up its banks, and if
necessary help it establish a new currency as well.
On Monday,
talks between Greece
and the finance ministers of the eurozone ended chaotically. The Syriza
government, led by the charismatic young Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, is
committed to ending the austerity regime imposed on Athens by the EU and the IMF and is refusing
to borrow any more money under the terms of the bailout agreement.
The rest of
the EU, led by Germany ,
is standing firm. It may be willing to make some minor concessions, such as
rebranding the loans or extending their duration. But it does not look willing
to compromise on the core issue — that Greece has to stick to the
austerity plan, and keep tight controls on public spending.
There may
still be a deal to be struck. Greece
after all only accounts for a small percentage of the total eurozone economy.
Its debts amount to just 315 billion euros, hardly a massive sum in the context
of an economic bloc with a total gross domestic product of 9.5 trillion euros.
But the worrying point is this: Both sides have an increasing interest in a
catastrophic failure.
Look at it
from the perspective of Germany ,
and the other core eurozone states. If they give in to Syriza, they will only
encourage other radical anti-austerity parties in Spain ,
Italy
and elsewhere. Any member state will be able to elect a left-wing government,
ramp up public spending, and insist that the rest of the zone pay the bills.
The
eurozone will have been turned from a merely dysfunctional monetary union into
a completely unworkable one — and that is hardly an improvement. Worse,
politicians who cave in to Syriza may well get wiped out when they next face
the electorate. So they have to strong incentive to stay firm.
Then look
at it from Tsipras’s viewpoint. If he compromises and starts tearing up his
election promises, which include a higher minimum wage, and hiring more
government workers, what then? The Greek economy will keep declining. And he
will be out of power very quickly. If he sticks to his guns, Greece may well
be ejected from the euro, but if Tsipras manages that well, he may well
consolidate his grip on power.
Remember,
Syriza is a party with its roots in hard-left Leninist politics. It isn’t
necessarily afraid of disruptive change, and it won’t always play by the rules
of the club of mainstream social democratic parties. So a Grexit may only be a
possibility — Beremberg Bank, for example, currently puts it at 35% — but it
could happen. If so, the U.S.
would have to get involved. Here’s why.
The
immediate aftermath of a sudden exit from the euro EURUSD, -0.21% would be chaotic. Greece would be bust, with little
in the way of hard currency to pay for imports of oil and medicines. It would
be under the control of a radical government, with little experience of power.
Its medium-term prospects might be fine — but the short-term would be looking
very bleak.
You might
expect the EU to step in with financial and technical aid. It would if the Ukraine or Bulgaria were sliding into chaos.
But Greece
will be different. It will be important to the rest of the eurozone nations not
only that Greece
fails but that it is seen to fail and fail badly. After all, the worst thing
that could happen would be for Greece
to flourish outside the single currency — which, with a massively depreciated
currency, and lots of financial aid, is what could happen pretty quickly. So
the rest of Europe may sit on its hand, even
if it collapses.
You might
also expect the IMF to step in. Rescuing states that have failed financially
is, after all, its job. That is what it has done in Argentina
and Thailand
and many other countries. And yet, under its French managing director Christine
Lagarde, the Fund has proved to be more interested in supporting whatever the
EU wants than preserving global financial stability. If the EU wants Greece to fail,
the IMF may go along with that.
Who does
that leave? Greece can turn
to Russia
for help, and the new government has already struck up a friendly relationship
with President Vladimir Putin. The Chinese may want to increase their influence
in the region. But it mainly leaves the U.S. Only one country has the
financial resources and the technical expertise to help a country collapsing
financially — and that is America .
The U.S. doesn’t want Greece
to turn into a failed state — there are already too many of those on the other
side of the Mediterranean . Nor does it care
one way or the other whether the euro succeeds as a currency or not. Indeed, as
a long-term rival to the dollar, it would probably prefer if it didn’t.
The chances
are that no one in Tennessee or Idaho really wants to
bail out the Greeks. But if this mess doesn’t get fixed soon, come the summer
that might well be what happens.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-the-us-will-have-to-bail-out-greece-2015-02-18
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