JUL 13,
2015
By BARRY
EICHENGREEN
BERKELEY –
Whatever one thinks about the tactics of Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s
government in negotiations with the country’s creditors, the Greek people
deserve better than what they are being offered. Germany
wants Greece
to choose between economic collapse and leaving the eurozone. Both options
would mean economic disaster; the first, if not both, would be politically
disastrous as well.
When I
wrote in 2007 that no member state would voluntarily leave the eurozone, I
emphasized the high economic costs of such a decision. The Greek government has
shown that it understands this. Following the referendum, it agreed to what it
– and the voters – had just rejected: a set of very painful and difficult
conditions. Tsipras and his new finance minister, Euclid Tsakalotos, have gone
to extraordinary lengths to mollify Greece ’s creditors.
But when I
concluded that no country would leave the eurozone, I failed to imagine that Germany would force
another member out. This, clearly, would be the effect of the politically
intolerable and economically perverse conditions tabled by Germany ’s
finance ministry.
German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble’s idea of a temporary “time out” from the
euro is ludicrous. Given Greece ’s
collapsing economy and growing humanitarian crisis, the government will have no
choice, absent an agreement, but to print money to fund basic social services.
It is inconceivable that a country in such deep distress could meet the
conditions for euro adoption – inflation within 2% of the eurozone average and
a stable exchange rate for two years – between now and the end of the decade.
If Grexit occurs, it will not be a holiday; it will be a retirement.
Early
Monday morning, European leaders agreed to remove the reference to this “time
out” from the announcement of the latest bailout deal. But this door, having
been opened, will not now be easily closed. The Eurosystem has been rendered
more fragile and subject to destabilization. Other European finance ministers
will have to answer for agreeing to forward to their leaders a provisional
draft containing Schäuble’s destructive language.
Economically,
the new program is perverse, because it will plunge Greece deeper into depression. It
envisages raising additional taxes, cutting pensions further, and implementing
automatic spending cuts if fiscal targets are missed. But it provides no basis
for recovery or growth. The Greek economy is already in free-fall, and
structural reforms alone will not reverse the downward spiral.
The
agreement continues to require primary budget surpluses (net of interest
payments), rising to 3.5% of GDP by 2018, which will worsen Greece ’s slump.
Re-profiling the country’s debt, which is implicitly part of the agreement,
will do nothing to ameliorate this, given that interest payments already are
minimal through the end of the decade. As the depression deepens, the deficit
targets will be missed, triggering further spending cuts and accelerating the
economy’s contraction.
Eventually,
the agreement will trigger Grexit, either because the creditors withdraw their
support after fiscal targets are missed, or because the Greek people rebel.
Triggering that exit is transparently Germany ’s intent.
Finally,
the privatization fund at the center of the new program will do nothing to
encourage structural reform. Yes, Greece needs to privatize
inefficient public enterprises. But the Greek government is being asked to
privatize with a gun held to its head. Privatization at fire-sale prices, with
most of the proceeds used to pay down debt, will not put Greek parliamentarians
or the public in a mood to press ahead enthusiastically with structural reform.
These
partners should not allow the European project to be sacrificed on the altar of
German public opinion or German leaders’ insistence on “rules.” If Germany ’s
government refuses to see the light, the others should find a way forward
without it. Franco-German solidarity would be irreparably damaged, but
Franco-German solidarity is worth nothing if the best it can produce is this
agreement.
Last but
not least, the German public deserve better. Germans deserve a leader who
stands firm in the face of extremism, rather than encouraging it, whether at
home or abroad. They deserve a Europe that can
play a greater role in global affairs. Above all, given Germany ’s
stunning political and economic achievements since World War II, they deserve
their fellow Europeans’ admiration and respect, not renewed resentment and
suspicion.
https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/greece-debt-agreement-risks-by-barry-eichengreen-2015-07
Barry
Eichengreen is Professor of Economics at the University of California,
Berkeley; Pitt Professor of American History and Institutions at the University
of Cambridge; and a former senior policy adviser at the International Monetary
Fund. His newest book, Hall of Mirrors:The Great Depression, the Great
Recession, and the Uses – and Misuses – of History, was just published
by Oxford University Press.
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