21 MAY 21,
2015 12:01 AM EDT
By
Konstantine Gatsios & Dimitrios A. Ioannou
Bloomberg
A widely
told narrative of the economic crisis in Greece holds that it is the product
of excessive austerity, imposed by arrogant outsiders who misread the
situation. The only way out, the story goes, is to break the resulting
recessionary spiral with a policy of fiscal stimulus.
This
account doesn't stand up to scrutiny and needs to be countered if the current
brinkmanship over Greece 's
bailout is to end well.
To begin,
it is odd to claim that a crisis caused by a 10-year infusion of excessive cash
can be cured by means of further stimulus. The theory that it can assumes that Greece lacks
sufficient “effective demand,” or the capacity of consumers to purchase goods
and services at current prices. Restore this and a virtuous circle of growth
will follow.
A single
statistic should suffice to cast doubt on this assumption. Greece 's gross
domestic product was similar in 2001 and 2014, measured in constant 2005
prices, meaning that “effective demand” in these two years before and after the
debt crisis was approximately equal. And yet unemployment in 2014 was almost
triple the 2001 level. The key to resolving Greece 's economic woes must,
therefore, lie in something other than demand.
Equally
telling is that during the five years since the crisis began, Greek imports
have exceeded exports by almost 60 percent. Although Greeks are certainly
buying fewer foreign goods than in 2007, it is clear that insufficient
“effective demand” is not the root problem here. What has been lacking is
“effective supply” -- the ability of the Greek economy to produce enough
competitively priced goods to sell and grow.
So why has
the recession been so deep and so lasting, if not because of austerity? The
answer lies in what happened between 2001 and the start of the financial
crisis.
After the
euro was introduced in 1999, Greece
received more in credit than it needed every year, between 5 percent and 10
percent of gross domestic product. Populist politicians funneled this excess
money to their political clients, explaining the windfall as a “development
dividend” that resulted from “structural convergence” with the core euro area
countries. This was a fantasy, because there was no such convergence. Yet, it
was natural for the recipients of this largesse to see it as real and permanent
income.
Even after
the crisis erupted, nobody from the political establishment had the courage to
confess what had really been going on. This is why most Greeks still believe
the country's “normal” level of wealth is equivalent to the 240 billion euro
GDP achieved in 2008, and that every deviation must be the result either of an
anti-Greek conspiracy or ill-conceived economic policies. These misguided
beliefs lie at the root of the popular disillusionment with Greece 's
mainstream political parties, and explain the rise of the anti-austerity,
anti-reform Syriza party.
The
misunderstanding of what underlies the crisis isn't just held by ordinary Greeks;
sophisticated proponents of the anti-austerity narrative believe it, too. But
it is no less wrong for that.
Look at the
unemployment rate, which has jumped from about 10 percent to almost 30 percent
since 2010. This simply doesn't correspond to an output gap -- the difference
between an economy's actual and potential levels of activity -- that could be
quickly closed by stimulus. You could pump cash into the economy to increase
demand and GDP still wouldn't return to its 2008 level, from 180 billion euros
($200 billion) today.
There are
multiple factors to explain why Greece 's
potential output has fallen. One is that the unemployed lack the knowledge and
qualifications to work in those economic sectors capable of expanding the
economy; another is that it probably doesn't have enough of the high growth,
tradeable sectors necessary to boost the economy.
In fact, a
policy of Greek fiscal stimulus would have the perverse effect of creating jobs
in Germany , China and other exporting countries that would
simply sell their wares to Greece .
This is why
we take issue with suggestions that ending austerity would unleash the Greek
economy, or that structural reform is less urgent because it takes too long and
has too limited an impact. On the contrary, there is plenty of evidence that Greece has been
unable to become more competitive and escape its economic doldrums, because it
has failed to adopt the structural reforms needed to give it a sustainable 240
billion euro economy again.
There is,
however, one aspect of the complaint Greeks lodge against their euro area
partners that is well founded: namely, that Greece should have been allowed to
default in 2010. Had that happened, the overall debt burden on the Greek
economy would be at least 50 billion euro smaller than it is today, improving
the prospects for a healthy recovery. This necessary and timely default was
prevented, because it would have harmed some too-big-to-fail European banks.
The upshot
is that in addition to all of its self-inflicted wounds, Greece is
paying a hidden tax to subsidize the rescue of foreign banks. That injustice
needs to be recognized and righted through debt relief.
To contact
the authors on this story:
Konstantine
Gatsios at gatsios@aueb.gr
Dimitrios
Ioannou at mosdim26@gmail.com
To contact
the editor on this story:
Marc
Champion at mchampion7@bloomberg.net
http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-05-21/reform-not-stimulus-is-the-way-out-for-greece
No comments:
Post a Comment