34 JUN 27,
2015 10:15 AM EDT
By The Editors
Bloomberg
After
months of confusion and indecision over Greece and its debts, a moment of
clarity may finally be approaching. The referendum called for July 5 by Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras promises some kind of resolution. For that, at
least, one should be grateful.
There is
little else to celebrate. Getting to next Sunday without a financial breakdown
in Greece
looks impossible; Greeks are already lining up at ATMs. And the choice
confronting them when they vote will be between two very bleak alternatives.
This mess is a textbook case of political shortsightedness and catastrophic
mismanagement.
At one
point, a referendum made sense as part of the way forward. Not anymore. The idea
was for creditors to moderate their demands and include discussion of debt
relief in a deal. Aside from having merit on its own terms, such a bargain
would have let Tsipras claim a small victory, and allowed him to ask the
country to support the agreement, which in turn would have strengthened its
credibility.
No such
luck. The creditors wouldn't bend; Tsipras has attacked their offer bitterly,
and seems likely to call on the country to reject it. Greeks must choose
between commitments that will worsen their short-term suffering and do little
to improve their long-term prospects, or immediate default, likely ejection
from the euro system, and even greater political and economic turmoil.
Offered
this dismal choice, Greek voters should accept the terms, and perhaps they will
-- but it is a capitulation that won't repair the Greek economy, and this
surrender will sting for years. The European Union should never have demanded
it, and will surely come to regret that it did.
First,
though, comes the immediate challenge of getting to the referendum in an
orderly way. A vote to affirm a deal backed by the government would have
relieved the stress on the Greek banking system. A vote on a deal opposed by
the government will ramp it up. If banks are allowed to open on Monday, they
will most likely be subject to a full-scale run.
Because no
deal has been agreed upon and Tsipras, in effect, is calling for default, it is
hard to see how the European Central Bank can continue to accept Greek bonds as
collateral for its liquidity assistance. Underlining the point, Greece will go
into arrears with the International Monetary Fund on Tuesday. Without ECB
support, the banks will have to close, and capital controls will have to be put
in place. Very quickly the government will be forced to issue IOUs to pay wages
and other costs.
Even before
the referendum, Greece
may therefore be halfway out of the euro system. Then, depending on the vote,
Tsipras may have to resign, and Greece
will be without a government.
This, to
repeat, is the best-case scenario.
Tsipras has
failed his country. He seemed to delight in infuriating the creditors and
uniting them against him. That was a reckless strategy, and it has failed. But
the EU's leaders, the IMF and the ECB are even more at fault. They have
extended and deepened the crisis for no good purpose. Their intransigence in
recent days suggests a willingness, even an eagerness in some quarters, to see Greece default
and exit the euro system.
Whatever
the result next Sunday, there's a fair chance that both those things will
happen in the end. And however the Greeks vote, an already weakened euro system
will be left even weaker when the next crisis comes around. It is a
still-unfolding disaster, and it need never have happened.
To contact
the senior editor responsible for Bloomberg View’s editorials: David Shipley at
davidshipley@bloomberg.net.
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