By ARISTOS
DOXIADIS
FEB. 25, 2015
The New York Times
In all four
countries, when capital from abroad stopped flowing in, increasing exports
became an urgent goal. The other three countries achieved this quickly. Greece did not.
If it had boosted exports, its recession would have been much shallower; by one
estimate, a 25 percent increase in exports could have limited the drop of gross
domestic product to just 3 percent.
Why did Greece fail to
adjust like other southern European countries? Wages have dropped far more in Greece since
2010 than in any other country, and the cost of labor is no longer a barrier to
exports. Businesses have not taken advantage of this for three reasons:
regulations, fear and size.
Regulatory
barriers to starting or expanding a business in Greece
used to be the worst in Europe , and they are
still formidable. Since 2010 there has been some reform, demanded by the
“troika” (the European Commission, European Central Bank, and the International
Monetary Fund), but progress is slow. Hundreds of thousands of pages of small
print need to be canceled, thousands of officials must lose their authority to
block business decisions, and protected professions must be opened to
competition from new business models. Politicians have not expended much
political capital to push through these changes.
Fear also
held back the economy. In other countries most parties reached a broad
consensus over structural change. In Greece no political party had the
courage to take ownership of any reforms, any cuts in expenditure or any new
taxes, even though it was very clear that some such combination was inevitable.
When in government, politicians blamed all measures on the troika; when in
opposition, they declared all measures unnecessary and wrong and branded the
government as traitors.
This
polarization brought violence and threats. Tourism was hit for three years by
pictures of arson and beatings in Athens ,
as well as by port blockades and taxi strikes. Foreign investors were put off
by threats from the surging Syriza opposition that they would reverse all sales
of state assets, and would restore a centralized wage system that enforces pay
raises every year, regardless of productivity. Deposits flowed out of banks due
to fear of a “Grexit” or on rumors of nationalization, leaving no funds to lend
to export-oriented businesses.
Finally,
the size of companies in Greece
is a fundamental structural issue. Industrial capitalism was never strong in Greece , which
is a society of small owners and of microbusinesses. Land and homes belong
mostly to their occupants, free of mortgage, more so than in any Western
country. Self-employment and companies of fewer than 10 employees are much more
prevalent than in any other European nation. Only 5 percent of employment in
the whole economy occurs in companies with more than 250 employees. Even the
main export industry, tourism, consists mostly of medium and small businesses.
Over many
decades, institutional factors have been blocking business growth and
consolidation of industries. These range from uneven enforcement of tax and labor
regulations in favor of the smallest, to a bankruptcy regime in which the state
has first claim on all assets of insolvent companies.
Small
businesses had trouble adapting to the shock of reduced domestic demand and
lower labor costs. Companies can only adapt quickly if they have managers with
some experience with exports, and factories in good shape where they can hire
more workers. Small companies had neither. Only a handful of big and healthy
firms grasped the opportunity.
Unfortunately,
Greece ’s
new government does not seem to offer a solution to these structural problems.
Indeed, it is unlikely that the radical left party, Syriza, will help
export-led growth. In opposition, Syriza denounced all reforms that could boost
competitiveness. Now, in government, they say they will focus on tax collection
from the rich, on better social services for the poor, and on taking on the
“oligarchs,” who dominate the media and public works. These are laudable aims,
but they will do little to help the country’s trade.
Contrary to
populist-received wisdom, Greek “oligarchs” have a very limited grip on the
economy. They do not control mineral resources as in Russia ;
they do not move huge amounts of capital as on Wall Street; there are no large
sweatshops as in China ; they
do not own great tracts of farmland as in earlier Latin
America . They held some sway over the banks, but this has
diminished greatly in the bailout. Oligarchs are not the key obstacle to
growth.
What Greece needs is
bigger businesses, more foreign investment, more experiments with new business
models, and more innovation coming out of its universities. Syriza appears to
be against all of that.
If so, it
matters little what they manage to negotiate on debt and fiscal deficits.
Unless Greece
can export more, the country will fail to grow in the anti-austerity phase of
this crisis, just as it failed under austerity.
Aristos
Doxiadis is an economist and a venture capitalist.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/26/opinion/what-greece-needs.html?_r=0
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