A Game of
Chicken Between the Greek Government, Creditors Helped Put Radical-Left
Opposition Party Ahead in Polls
The Wall
Street Journal
“…the austerity Europe has imposed on Greece
as the price of rescue loans…”
“snap elections
Sunday, … could return the country to the brink of exit from the euro…”
“Mr.
Samaras, a suave conservative who swings between statesmanship and populism…”
“…Wolfgang
Schäuble …wanted to boot Greece
out of the euro…”
“…Mr. Samaras faced a
younger, left-wing version of himself: Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras , who
blamed the crisis on austerity, not austerity on the crisis…”
“…Eurozone finance officials now think Greece will need
a longer bailout. Sunday’s election winner must bridge an even bigger gap….”
By MARCUS
WALKER and MARIANNA KAKAOUNAKI
Updated
Jan. 21, 2015 9:17 p.m. ET
ATHENS—Greek
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, under pressure at home to end his country’s
financial bailout regimen, sought help last spring from German Chancellor
Angela Merkel about relieving some of Greece’s debt.
Ms. Merkel
asked an interpreter to translate the phrase “debt relief,” according to people
familiar with the meeting. Then she told Mr. Samaras: “It doesn’t sound as good
in German.”
The retort
was an early sign Greece
could expect little clemency from its German-led creditors.
Greece, the eurozone’s most troubled economy, remains tethered to an unforgiving
bailout machinery, built at Berlin ’s
behest, that issues financial aid in exchange for reforms and regular
inspections.
The
system’s iron rules helped push the Greek government to snap elections Sunday, with an outcome that could return the country to
the brink of exit from the euro. In polls, Mr. Samaras’s ruling
conservatives trail the radical-left opposition party Syriza, which promises to
end the austerity Europe has imposed on Greece as the
price of rescue loans.
Syriza
could find it even harder to swallow the market-oriented overhauls that proved
too much for Mr. Samaras’s government. Unless it agrees to overhauls, German
officials say, Greece
won’t get the loans it needs to avoid default by the summer.
Even if Mr.
Samaras manages to win Sunday, the mounting conflicts between Athens
and its creditors show how hard it will be for any Greek leader to satisfy Europe and the International Monetary Fund without
causing political convulsions at home.
The renewed
Greek drama illustrates how Europe’s long economic malaise is increasingly
turning into a political and social crisis, eroding public confidence in
established parties—and in the institutions of the European Union—while fueling
the rise of populists of both left and right.
This
account of how Athens and its lenders brought a
long-simmering crisis back to a boil is based on interviews with 18 senior
officials in Greece , Europe and beyond. Many European officials said Greece was
guilty of hubris by trying to end creditors’ control before fixing its economy.
But if Mr. Samaras loses Sunday’s elections, Europe ’s
rigid machinery will have been his nemesis.
“We always
tell the crisis countries to ‘Stay the course,’ ” and continue with painful
policies if they want to stay in the euro, a senior German official said. “But
it’s difficult for them. All we are offering is the stick.”
Mr. Samaras, a suave conservative who swings
between statesmanship and populism, used to rail against the tax increases and spending cuts required
under Greece ’s
bailout memorandum with the eurozone and the IMF.
As
opposition leader in 2011, Mr. Samaras said the agreement “permanently
suffocates the Greek economy.” Rather than blaming the debt crisis for the
tough measures, he said: “It’s the memorandum that has bought us closer to
bankruptcy.”
But after
winning election in June 2012, Mr. Samaras traveled to Berlin to offer Ms. Merkel a mea culpa. He
rehearsed his lines with aides for six hours in the Berlin Hilton, then persuaded
Ms. Merkel that he would carry out the measures. She backed him, overruling
others in Berlin —including her finance
minister, Wolfgang Schäuble —who wanted
to boot Greece
out of the euro.
For nearly
two years, Mr. Samaras implemented enough of the bailout requirements to
satisfy inspectors from the IMF, the European Commission and the European
Central Bank, a group nicknamed the troika. Every positive report won Greece another
slice of bailout money. The gaping budget deficit shrank.
But so did Greece ’s
economy. By early 2014, GDP was 27% smaller than before the financial crisis.
Unemployment had reached 28%. Households and businesses had sunk into debt as
incomes plunged. A debt crisis that began with government had spread to the
private sector. And although recession finally ended, voters had had enough.
The
government and European authorities trumpeted Greece ’s bond issue in April, the
first in four years. Greece
had also achieved a small primary surplus: tax revenues covered public
spending, excluding debt interest.
But such
progress rang hollow to Greeks who paid for it with higher taxes and deep cuts
to pay, pensions and health care. “To many ordinary Greeks, the primary surplus
means, ‘I am poorer,’ ” said Nick Malkoutzis, founder of MacroPolis.gr, a site
of political and economic analysis. “But the hope was that we had staggered
over the finish line.”
During
European Parliament elections in May, Mr. Samaras faced a younger, left-wing
version of himself: Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras , who blamed the crisis on
austerity, not austerity on the crisis.
Mr.
Samaras, meanwhile, told voters the pain was ending. “There will be no new
measures,” he said at a rally in Athens .
“No new measures” became his mantra. But under the memorandum, Greece still had
to boost its primary surplus to a hefty 4.5% of GDP and hold it there for
years.
Syriza came
first in the European elections. Lawmakers from Mr. Samaras’s party, New
Democracy, made it clear they were tired of passing unpopular measures. The
premier shuffled his cabinet, replacing reformist ministers with populists who
could take on Syriza.
Mr.
Samaras’s priority was to get out of the bailout straitjacket as fast as
possible, said people familiar with his thinking. His plan was for Greece to
refuse any more bailout loans after 2014, instead relying on bond sales. He
sought, at most, an overdraft facility from Europe
to assure bond investors.
European
inspections would be minimized. The IMF—the troika’s toughest enforcer—would be
sent home. Mr. Samaras hoped to declare victory by late 2014. By building
political momentum, he could win a tricky vote in the Greek Parliament: The
selection of a new Greek president by a February 2015 deadline. The post is
ceremonial, but failure to fill it triggers general elections.
For Mr.
Samaras’s plan to work, Greece
needed to first pass a major troika review that would yield €7.2 billion ($8.3
billion) in aid. The problem was a backlog of overhauls from past reviews,
including reforms to taxation, pensions, labor, banks, mortgages, unions,
market regulation and the public payroll.
Most
officials in Greece ’s
government wanted to dilute the changes and push the most unpopular reforms
into the future. Demands for pension cuts and sales-tax increases, for example,
were “political suicide,” a senior Greek official said.
All sides
accepted that Greece
couldn’t complete all the requirements by year-end. The troika met with Greek
officials in Paris in early September to find
out how much Greece
was willing to do.
During
talks at a diplomat’s villa, Greek ministers and aides to Mr. Samaras were
deliberately vague “because we were testing the water,” a Greek official said.
A top Samaras aide demanded the IMF show respect for Greece ’s fiscal improvement. “You
can’t treat us as if we’re still in boot camp,” he said.
At night,
top officials from both sides dined at a modest bistro near the Arc de
Triomphe, after first checking for Greek tourists. The troika proposed more
time for the review and extending the bailout into 2015. But that would deny Athens the prize of liberating Greece from the program by
Christmas.
The Greeks
replied that they wanted no more money from Europe
or the IMF after December, when the country would turn to bond markets. The
troika was skeptical.
Back at the
villa, European Commission negotiator Declan Costello ended the Paris talks by reading aloud the list of overhauls Greece had
rejected. “It’s impossible for us to accept your doing nothing on all of
these,” he said.
Mr. Samaras
then appealed to a higher power. On a Sept. 23 visit to the German chancellery,
he asked Ms. Merkel to understand that he couldn’t enact so many unpopular
measures during 2014. If Europe pressed Greece too hard, it would find
itself dealing with a much less cooperative Syriza government, he warned.
Difficult
reforms could be postponed—as so-called leftovers—under a gentler post-bailout
agreement that would free Greece
from the shackles of the troika.
“We want to
declare victory,” Mr. Samaras told the chancellor. “It would be a big success
for Europe” if Greece ,
the hardest-hit crisis country, could graduate from its bailout.
Ms. Merkel
asked if bond markets were ready to fund Greece , according to people
present. If not, then Greece
would need more than overdraft protection from Europe .
It would need another bailout.
Ms. Merkel
said Greece ’s
next phase would still require robust inspections—including the IMF. Otherwise,
there was no guarantee that Greece
would continue with its overhaul. She urged the Greek premier to complete the
troika review.
The German
side felt Greece
was trying to have it both ways. Mr. Samaras was seeking reform delays now—and
weak controls later. Berlin suspected Athens was hoping the
troika would let it off the hook. German officials advised tackling tough
reforms right away. Popular anger would die down, they said.
A trip to Athens by the troika a
week later made little headway on the disputed reforms. When Greece ’s
finance minister, Gikas Hardouvelis, tried to schedule the next meeting, Mr.
Costello, of the European Commission, said, “Let’s meet when you’ve made more
progress on these points.”
In October,
Greece
proposed a budget law that infuriated the troika. It would allow many Greeks
with tax debts to pay them off in 100 monthly installments. The scheme’s
leniency risked undermining already weak habits of paying taxes promptly,
troika officials told Athens .
A plunge in
Greek bond prices that month scuttled Greece ’s chances of raising its own
funds. The selloff partly reflected investor suspicions that Greece ’s troika
review was going badly, as well as fears the government might fall over the
presidential vote due by February.
With the
troika refusing to return to Athens , officials
met again in Paris
during November to try to break the deadlock. Greek officials, now worried the
review could fail, offered some concessions.
The IMF
maintained its demands for tough labor and pension changes. The IMF also wanted
extra austerity measures to cover an anticipated budget shortfall from sagging
tax revenues.
Greek
officials thought the IMF was being stubborn and overly pessimistic. They
became convinced the IMF was avoiding an agreement that would pay Greece €7.2
billion, as a hedge against Syriza coming to power.
“You are
pulling the rug from under this government,” Chrysanthos Lazaridis, a top aide
to Mr. Samaras, told the IMF in Paris .
The IMF stays out of politics, was the reply.
The ECB,
usually a quiet observer in troika talks, backed the IMF’s view that Greece was
doing too little.
Even the
European Commission, which showed more sympathy for the political cost of
reforms, felt Greece ’s
concessions on taxes and pensions fell short. The commission thought Greece offered enough to justify another troika
visit to Athens ,
but not enough to close the review. The IMF, meanwhile, didn’t think it was
worth the trip.
On Nov. 30,
the Greeks, increasingly nervous, emailed new concessions. The proposals, which
included higher sales taxes on the economically important hotel sector, caused
a public fury following news leaks.
The IMF
wanted more. Germany , which
had brought the IMF into Europe’s crisis to crack the whip, concluded that Athens didn’t understand:
There would be no money for countries that didn’t complete their homework. Even
the commission wasn’t satisfied.
“At the end
of the day, they had reached the limit of what they could do,” a Brussels-based
official said. “And it wasn’t really good enough.”
Mr. Samaras
had run out of time to attain the victories he had sought before the Greek
Parliament voted on the presidency.
In early
December, Mr. Samaras and his closest aides decided the government’s survival
now required a roll of the dice. They brought forward the presidential ballot,
and postponed a deal with the troika until 2015.
Their
gamble was that enough lawmakers would support the government’s nominee for
president because, if not, snap elections might sink incumbent lawmakers along
with the country.
The gambit
failed. Mr. Samaras couldn’t mount an argument that drew broad support. A
government that had promised to end the bailout, curtail the measures, expel
the IMF, and alleviate the debt had returned empty-handed.
Eurozone
finance officials now think Greece
will need a longer bailout. Sunday’s election winner must bridge an even bigger
gap.
—Gabriele
Steinhauser contributed to this article.
Write to
Marcus Walker at marcus.walker@wsj.com
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