The New
York Times
Paul Krugman
MARCH 26,
2013, 4:42 PM
Paul Krugman
A
correspondent whom I respect has (gently) challenged me to say plainly what I
think Cyprus
should do — leaving aside all questions about political realism. And he’s
right: while I think it’s OK to spend most of my time on this blog working
within the limits of the politically possible, and relying on a combination of
reason and ridicule to push out those limits over time, once in a while I
should just flatly state what I would do if given a chance.
So here it
is: yes, Cyprus
should leave the euro. Now.
The reason
is straightforward: staying in the euro means an incredibly severe depression,
which will last for many years while Cyprus tries to build a new export
sector. Leaving the euro, and letting the new currency fall sharply, would
greatly accelerate that rebuilding.
If you look
at Cyprus ’s
trade profile, you see just how much damage the country is about to sustain.
This is a highly open economy with just two major exports, banking services and
tourism — and one of them just disappeared. This would lead to a severe slump
on its own. On top of that, the troika is demanding major new austerity, even
though the country supposedly has rough primary (non-interest) budget balance.
I wouldn’t be surprised to see a 20 percent fall in real GDP.
What’s the
path forward? Cyprus
needs to have a tourist boom, plus a rapid growth of other exports — my guess
would be agriculture as a driver, although I don’t know much about it. The
obvious way to get there is through a large devaluation; yes, in the end this
probably does come down to cheap deals that attract lots of British package
tours.
Getting to
the same point by cutting nominal wages would take much longer and inflict much
more human and economic damage.
But is it
even possible to leave the euro? The Eichengreen point — that even a hint of
exit would cause panicked capital flight and bank runs — is now moot: the banks
are closed, and capital is controlled. So if I were dictator, I’d just extend
the bank holiday long enough to prepare for the new currency.
OK, what
about the bank notes? I’m no kind of expert in such matters, but I’ve heard
suggestions to the effect that it might be possible to rush debit cards into
circulation, so that business could resume without having to wait for someone
to run the printing presses. The government might also be able to issue
temporary scrip, IOUs that don’t look like proper bank notes, as a transitional
measure.
Yes, it all
sounds kind of desperate and improvised. But desperation is appropriate!
Otherwise, we’re talking about Greek-level austerity or worse in an economy
whose fundamentals, thanks to the implosion of offshore banking, are much worse
than Greece ’s
ever were.
My guess is
that none of this will happen, at least not right away, that the country’s
leadership will fear the leap into the unknown that would come from euro exit
despite the obvious horror of trying to stay in. But as I said, I think euro
exit is now the right thing to do.
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