FEB 10,
2015 23
Daniel Gros
One critical difference lies in economic
fundamentals. Over the last two years, the eurozone's other peripheral
countries have proven their capacity for adjustment, by reducing their fiscal
deficits, expanding exports, and moving to current-account surpluses, thereby
negating the need for financing. Indeed, Greece is the only one that has
consistently dragged its feet on reforms and sustained abysmal export
performance.
Providing
an additional shield to the peripheral countries is the European Central Bank's
plan to begin purchasing sovereign bonds. Though the German government does not
officially support quantitative easing, it should be grateful to the ECB for
calming financial markets. Now Germany
can take a tough stance on the new Greek government's demands for a large-scale
debt write-off and an end to austerity, without fearing the kind of
financial-market turbulence that in 2012 left the eurozone with little choice
but to bail out Greece .
In fact,
both of the Greek government's demands are based on a misunderstanding. For
starters, Syriza and others argue that Greece 's public debt, at a massive
170% of GDP, is unsustainable and must be cut. Given that the country's
official debt constitutes the bulk of its overall public debt, the government
wants it reduced.
In fact, Greece 's
official creditors have granted it long enough grace periods and low enough
interest rates that the burden is bearable. Greece
actually spends less on debt service than Italy
or Ireland ,
both of which have much lower (gross) debt-to-GDP ratios. With payments on Greece 's
official foreign debt amounting to only 1.5% of GDP, debt service is not the
country's problem.
The
relatively low debt-service cost also removes the justification for Syriza's
demands for an end to austerity. The last bailout program from the
“troika" (the International Monetary Fund, the ECB, and the European
Commission), initiated in 2010, foresees a primary budget surplus (which
excludes interest payments) of 4% of GDP this year. That would be slightly more
than is needed to cover interest payments, and would thus allow Greece finally
to begin to reduce its debt.
The new Greek government's argument that this
is an unreasonable target fails to withstand scrutiny. After all, when faced
with excessively high debt, other European countries – including Belgium (from 1995), Ireland
(from 1991), and Norway
(from 1999) – maintained similar surpluses for at least ten years each,
typically in the aftermath of a financial crisis.
To be sure,
one can reasonably argue that austerity in the eurozone has been excessive, and
that fiscal deficits should have been much larger to sustain demand. But only
governments with access to market finance can use expansionary fiscal policy to
boost demand. For Greece ,
higher spending would have to be financed by lending from one or more official
institutions.
For the
same reason, it is disingenuous to claim that the troika forced Greece into
excessive austerity. Had Greece
not received financial support in 2010, it would have had to cut its fiscal
deficit from more than 10% of GDP to zero immediately. By financing continued
deficits until 2013, the troika actually enabled Greece to delay austerity.
Of course, Greece is not
the first country to request emergency financing to delay budget cuts, and then
complain that the cuts are excessive once the worst is over. This typically
happens when the government runs a primary surplus. When the government can
finance its current spending through taxes – and might even be able to increase
expenditure, if it does not have to pay interest – the temptation to renege on
debt intensifies.
It was
widely anticipated that Greece
would be tempted to follow this route when the troika program was initiated.
Last year, the new Greek finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, confirmed the
prediction, arguing that a primary surplus would give Greece the
upper hand in any negotiations on debt restructuring, because it could just
suspend repayments to the troika, without incurring any financing problems.
That approach would be a mistake. The
practical problem for Greece
now is not the sustainability of a debt that matures in 20-30 years and carries
very low interest rates; the real issue is the few payments to the IMF and the
ECB that fall due this year – payments that the new government has promised to
make.
But, to
follow through on this promise (and hire more employees), Greece will
need more financial support from its eurozone partners. Moreover, the country's
financial system will need continuing support from the ECB.
In other
words, Greece 's
new government must now try to convince its European partners that it deserves
more financial support, while pushing for a reduction of its existing debt and
resisting the austerity policies on which previous lending was conditioned. For
Syriza and its voters, the political honeymoon could be short.
_________________________________________________________________
Daniel Gros
Daniel Gros
is Director of the Brussels-based Center for European Policy Studies. He has
worked for the International Monetary Fund, and served as an economic adviser
to the European Commission, the European Parliament, and the French prime
minister and finance minister. He is the editor of Economie Internationale and
International Finance.
Read more
at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/syriza-greece-austerity-myth-by-daniel-gros-2015-02#l4DdMmmv2WsXPtIm.99
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