Matt Clinch |
@mattclinch81
2 Hours Ago
A key week
for Greece's
economic future drew to a close on Friday with the country facing the very real
threat that it's running out of money and key analysts warming to the idea that
it could be on its way out of the euro zone.
Euro zone
finance ministers are set to meet Friday to discuss Greece's latest proposals to extend
its loan agreement. But with Germany
already rejecting the plan, there is very little hope that an agreement will be
announced. Another meeting in Brussels
for next week was already being touted before Friday's meeting even began. The
main problem for the fiscally disciplined countries like Germany is that, despite the ground Greece has
given up in the last week, it is still asking for the bailout loan without all
of the strict austerity conditions that come with the money.
Greek
economist Elena Panaritis, former member of the Greek Parliament and the World
Bank, drew comparisons with the collapse of the Lehman Brothers in 2008. As
with the fall of the big U.S. bank, market-watchers feel euro zone policymakers
want to show the world they will only be pushed so far — with the result being Greece would be
allowed to exit the euro zone.
Panaritis
thought there was a "political statement as well as economic
statement" being made during the negotiations. Randy Kroszner, a former
U.S. Federal Reserve governor and the professor of economics at the University
of Chicago Booth School of Business, agreed that there were comparisons between
the two events.
"I
think there a parallel, but the tools exist if the European Union wants to keep
Greece in and if Greece is
willing to stay in," he told CNBC Friday. "Even though it may be
quite ugly, the likelihood of complete chaos is much lower. So that gives
policymakers more willingness to say 'Hey, we'll take that risk'."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102441576#.