by Geoffrey Smith @Geoffreytsmith JANUARY 8, 2015, 12:18 PM EST
Fortune
It’s fair
to say that this iteration of the Greek debt crisis is different. But that
doesn’t justify the kind of complacency financial markets are showing.
Things may
indeed be different in the details from 2012, when Greece nearly left the currency union,
dragging half a dozen other countries with it. The problem is, the big picture
has changed, if anything, for the worse. This time is just as dangerous as last
time because the Eurozone still doesn’t have the political institutions to back
its currency, and probably never will have.
True, the
worst phase of the crisis in 2012 led it to create the European Stability
Mechanism, a €500 billion ($600 billion) safety net for governments that
accepted the doctrine of aid in return for structural reforms and budgetary
austerity. It also adopted, at least in principle, a mechanism for vetting each
other’s budgets. And those of a charitable disposition can also believe that
the Eurozone’s banks are now solvent after big capital increases in the last
three years.
Most of
all, there was European Central Bank President Mario Draghi’s promise to do
“whatever it takes” to keep the Eurozone together, a comment has been widely
understood as a blanket underwriting of all Eurozone sovereigns.
For all
those reasons, financial markets (and, to judge by German media reports, Chancellor
Angela Merkel and her entourage) believe that, even if a new radical left-wing
government in Greece wins the Jan. 25 elections, walks away from its debts and
leaves the Eurozone, the rest of the union would be able to survive.
This is why
people are still willing to buy 10-year Italian government bonds at a yield of
only 1.85%, despite the fact that its economy, like its population, is dying,
and even though Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has yet to deliver any sort of
reform that will allow the country to grow out of a debt that now totals 133%
of gross domestic product.
The problem
is, the big flaws in the Eurozone’s institutional architecture haven’t been
fixed. There’s still no single Treasury, no pooling of debt liabilities, no
single Eurozone economic policy: nothing to force the people of Germany , Finland ,
the Netherlands , et al., to
stand behind the debts of Greece ,
Portugal or Italy .
This means
that the only effective firewall the Eurozone has in the event of a Greek exit
standing is the ECB’s “Outright Monetary Transactions” program, which has never
been tested, and is currently in legal limbo due to a preliminary opinion by Germany ’s Constitutional Court
that it violates the German constitution. (Ex-IMF official Alessandro Leipold
argues the point well here.)
But even if
OMTs are legal, the ECB will only buy a government’s bonds if it accepts in
return a formal adjustment program with lots of unpopular conditions that will
prolong the seemingly endless economic pain. OMT was designed to stop markets
expelling well-meaning members from the Eurozone by accident. It wasn’t
designed to cope with governments which have a clear democratic mandate to
overthrow the austerity doctrine.
Simon
Tilford, deputy director of the Center for European Reform, a London-based
think tank, points out that governments accepted harsh bailout terms in 2010
and 2011 because they knew they had no alternative, and because “a recovery
seemed just around the corner.” After four years of recession and stagnation,
Tilford says, that no longer holds, which is why Syriza is leading in the
polls, and why a majority of Italians–according to some polls–want out of the
euro altogether.
With the
revolt against austerity spreading, Antonio Fatas, a professor at INSEAD
business school in Singapore ,
thinks Berlin might try to make an example of
Syriza and force Greece
out of the Eurozone in order to scare other countries back into line. That
applies to Italy and Spain , where
another radical left party, Podemos, is currently heading the polls.
“If
Spaniards see bad things happening in Greece (after a Euro exit), you can
guarantee that they won’t vote for Podemos,” he says.
Such
thinking, he says, may explain recent comments out of Berlin playing down the risks of a “Grexit”.
Draghi made
a big deal in 2012 of the euro being an ‘irreversible’ project. But if Greece leaves, under any circumstances, then so
can other countries, and it would be folly not to expect markets to test that
thesis with Italy , Portugal or any
country that hasn’t proved it can grow in the 21st century. Even if that bet
fails, it will take the Eurozone at least another year to get over the
volatility and uncertainty.
There is
arguably a bigger gap between Syriza and the German-led creditors than in any
previous comparable bailout negotiations, and domestic politics has moved
against the Euro project in both Greece
and Germany
in the last four years. Merkel, Tilford notes, is already “running scared of
the Alternative für Deutschland,” an anti-euro party with stubbornly high poll
ratings, and will find it hard to get anywhere near to Tsipras’ demand that
over half of Greece ’s
bail-out debts are written down.
The
Eurozone is going to need all its capacity for negotiation and compromise to
avoid a blow-up—and that’s assuming it still wants to.
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