RICHARD
LEIN, AFP
JAN. 11,
2015, 8:40 AM
Business
insider
Paris (AFP)
- A Greek exit from the eurozone would certainly come at a cost to Europe , but just how expensive would it be?
The amount Athens owes its partners is equivalent to just a tiny
fraction of the eurozone's economy, but some analysts are still worried that a
'Grexit' could ultimately cost Europe its
single currency.
Global
markets plunged at the beginning of last week, seized by a fresh bout of fears
that Greece
may be forced to leave the euro.
A snap
election in Greece
on January 25 could bring to power the far-left Syriza party, which wants to
abandon the austerity policy imposed by the EU and IMF as part of the country's
240-billion-euro ($282 billion) international bailout.
The market
selloff was triggered by media reports indicating that if a new government in Athens reversed course, Germany
was ready to let Greece
leave the European club of common currency users.
Most
analysts doubt it would come to that, but if it did Athens would be hard pressed to repay its
bailout loans and would likely default.
"A
Greek default on its around 240 billion euros in rescue loans would send
another shock wave to the (euro) area," said Guy Verhofstadt, president of
the liberal ALDE group in the European Parliament.
For France the
total cost comes to over 42.4 billion euros, or 644 euros per resident.
For Italy the cost would be 37.3 billion euros, Spain 24.8 billion, the Netherlands 11.9 billion, Belgium 7.2 billion, Austria
5.8 billion, Portugal 1.1
billion and Ireland
300 million.
While the
headline numbers are huge, they are minuscule in comparison to the eurozone
economy. The 195 billion euros that Greece owes its partners is
equivalent to just four percent of 2013 eurozone government spending. Moreover,
the loans were scheduled to be repaid over many years.
And
eurozone banks, which were once considerably exposed to Greece , are no
longer so.
JPMorganCazenove
recently calculated that the eurozone lenders it covers have only about 5.0
billion euros in exposure to Greece .
'Financial
stampede'
Another
cost of a Grexit however would be the uncertainty it would spark in a eurozone
economy that has already nearly stalled, and could exact a very high price.
"The
biggest worry is about a financial stampede" to get out of Europe , said Thomas Grjebine, an economist at the CEPII
international economics institute.
"If
investors are not reassured that the eurozone is really solid there could be an
increase in interest rates, which are currently very low, and thus borrowing
costs," he said.
A rise in
the cost of credit and drop in investment would pull the rug out from under
efforts to revive eurozone growth.
Analysts
are divided over whether a Grexit could be contained or if it would it lead to
a break up of the eurozone.
Some see Europe as being far better prepared to handle a Grexit
thanks to the creation of a 500-billion-euro bailout fund and efforts taken to
strengthen the region's banks.
Economist
Holger Schmieding at Berenberg bank said the "contagion effects on other
European countries would be limited" from a Greek euro exit.
"With
ESM support funds, the readiness of the ECB to act and with progress towards
banking union, Europe could cope with a hypothetical
Greek accident," he said.
But
Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at London-based Capital Economics
said "it is not clear that the policy back-stops are sufficient to prevent
a Greek exit from triggering a bigger break-up."
He noted
that the bailout funds are not big enough to handle major countries like Italy and Spain , and the ECB might have
difficulty containing contagion in the bond markets.
"Historical
precedents show that it is nearly impossible to keep a monetary union intact
once the process of disintegration has started," noted for his part
Christopher Dembik at Saxo Banque, pointing in particular to the collapse of
the Austro-Hungarian empire.
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