SEP 27,
2011 10:33 EDT
By Martin
Feldstein
The
opinions expressed are his own.
The Greek
government needs to escape from an otherwise impossible situation. It has an
unmanageable level of government debt (150% of GDP, rising this year by ten
percentage points), a collapsing economy (with GDP down by more than 7% this
year, pushing the unemployment rate up to 16%), a chronic balance-of-payments
deficit (now at 8% of GDP), and insolvent banks that are rapidly losing
deposits.
The only
way out is for Greece
to default on its sovereign debt. When it does, it must write down the
principal value of that debt by at least 50%. The current plan to reduce the
present value of privately held bonds by 20% is just a first small step toward this
outcome.
If Greece leaves
the euro after it defaults, it can devalue its new currency, thereby
stimulating demand and shifting eventually to a trade surplus. Such a strategy
of “default and devalue” has been standard fare for countries in other parts of
the world when they were faced with unmanageably large government debt and a
chronic current-account deficit. It hasn’t happened in Greece only because Greece is trapped in the single
currency.
The markets
are fully aware that Greece ,
being insolvent, will eventually default. That’s why the interest rate on Greek
three-year government debt recently soared past 100% and the yield on ten-year
bonds is 22%, implying that a €100 principal payable in ten years is worth less
than €14 today.
Why, then,
are political leaders in France
and Germany
trying so hard to prevent – or, more accurately, to postpone – the inevitable?
There are two reasons.
First, the
banks and other financial institutions in Germany
and France
have large exposures to Greek government debt, both directly and through the
credit that they have extended to Greek and other eurozone banks. Postponing a
default gives the French and German financial institutions time to build up
their capital, reduce their exposure to Greek banks by not renewing credit when
loans come due, and sell Greek bonds to the European Central Bank.
The second,
and more important, reason for the Franco-German struggle to postpone a Greek
default is the risk that a Greek default would induce sovereign defaults in
other countries and runs on other banking systems, particularly in Spain and Italy . This risk was highlighted by
the recent downgrade of Italy ’s
credit rating by Standard & Poor’s.
A default
by either of those large countries would have disastrous implications for the
banks and other financial institutions in France
and Germany .
The European Financial Stability Fund is large enough to cover Greece ’s financing needs but not large enough to
finance Italy and Spain if they
lose access to private markets. So European politicians hope that by showing
that even Greece can avoid default, private markets will gain enough confidence
in the viability of Italy and Spain to continue lending to their governments at
reasonable rates and financing their banks.
If Greece is allowed to default in the coming
weeks, financial markets will indeed regard defaults by Spain and Italy as much more likely. That
could cause their interest rates to spike upward and their national debts to
rise rapidly, thus making them effectively insolvent. By postponing a Greek
default for two years, Europe’s politicians hope to give Spain and Italy time to prove that they are
financially viable.
Two years
could allow markets to see whether Spain ’s banks can handle the
decline of local real-estate prices, or whether mortgage defaults will lead to
widespread bank failures, requiring the Spanish government to finance large
deposit guarantees. The next two years would also disclose the financial
conditions of Spain ’s
regional governments, which have incurred debts that are ultimately guaranteed
by the central government.
Likewise,
two years could provide time for Italy to demonstrate whether it can
achieve a balanced budget. The Berlusconi government recently passed a budget
bill designed to raise tax revenue and to bring the economy to a balanced
budget by 2013. That will be hard to achieve, because fiscal tightening will
reduce Italian GDP, which is now barely growing, in turn shrinking tax revenue.
So, in two years, we can expect a debate about whether budget balance has then
been achieved on a cyclically adjusted basis. Those two years would also
indicate whether Italian banks are in better shape than many now fear.
If Spain and Italy
do look sound enough at the end of two years, European political leaders can
allow Greece
to default without fear of dangerous contagion. Portugal
might follow Greece
in a sovereign default and in leaving the eurozone. But the larger countries
would be able to fund themselves at reasonable interest rates, and the current
eurozone system could continue.
If,
however, Spain or Italy does not
persuade markets over the next two years that they are financially sound,
interest rates for their governments and banks will rise sharply, and it will
be clear that they are insolvent. At that point, they will default. They would
also be at least temporarily unable to borrow and would be strongly tempted to
leave the single currency.
But there
is a greater and more immediate danger: Even if Spain
and Italy
are fundamentally sound, there may not be two years to find out. The level of
Greek interest rates shows that markets believe that Greece will default very soon. And
even before that default occurs, interest rates on Spanish or Italian debt
could rise sharply, putting these countries on a financially impossible path.
The eurozone’s politicians may learn the hard way that trying to fool markets
is a dangerous strategy.
This piece
comes from Project Syndicate.
REUTERS/Jose
Manuel Ribeiro
No comments:
Post a Comment