Κυριακή 21 Ιουνίου 2015

Athens as part of the solution or as not part of the problem?*

Greece has unwillingly invested 180% of its current GDP in the Euro project. It can't afford to walk away with only the damage of the failed EMU.

Before forming an opinion on whither it's better for Greece and the Eurozone to part ways, one should examine the facts, starting from the basics. Greece should not have entered the Eurozone in the first place. It should not have applied for membership (let alone by using the Goldman Sachs swap trick) and the Eurozone should not have accepted. Both sides were aware of the fact that the Greek economy was only nominally converging with the EU median level, but chose to ignore reality, for purely political reasons.
The Greek has always been a “deficit economy”, like the rest of the periphery. The exchange rate of the Greek Drachma was revealing: In 1978 it took 20 Drachmas to buy one German Mark, in 1988 it stood at 70 Drachmas and in 1998 at 170 per one Mark. Trade and current account imbalances where counterbalanced by the exchange rates. This sort of “security valve” was eliminated with the establishment of the euro, when states forfeited monetary sovereignty but no authority has undertaken the relevant responsibility.

The Eurozone has evidently failed to achieve the aims of the Economic and Monetary Union it was intended to serve (as defined in the Maastrich Treaty): “... harmonious and balanced development of economic activities, sustainable and non-inflationary growth respecting the environment, a high degree of convergence of economic performance, a high level of employment and of social protection, the raising of the standard of living and quality of life, and economic and social cohesion and solidarity among Member States.” The Euro was supposed to be just a medium towards these aims, not the goal. Thirteen years after joining the Euro, the non-core countries like Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal etc. are undeniably further apart from the core countries than they were before. This can't be explained by the “lazy, cheating Greeks who live beyond their means” stereotype.
The problem with the euro is that it is not a real common currency, but an inflexible fixed exchange rate regime, since it lacks a common economic, fiscal and social policy that would absorb the differences of the various economic realities. The Eurozone is missing what the Federal Republic of Germany uses in order to balance the different realities of (for example) Bayern and Bremen. This must be addressed, either with or without Greece in the club, in order to avoid more divergence, division and conflict down the road.

Letting aside the inherent failings of the Greek reality, it would be unwise to ignore what is now at stake for Athens. Greece has been forced to undergo a “salvation program” that saved mostly the French and German banks, destroyed the Greek economy, impoverished the society and ballooned its national debt. But seen from a different point of view, Greece has invested a good part of the 180% of its current GDP (namely its national debt) in the “Euro project”. If it were to let go now, and seek a solution to its problems alone, with a new national currency, it would essentially be forfeiting its investment and keeping only the damage inflicted from the failure of the EMU.

The Greek government might or might not succeed in securing a deal that would solve the problem of its country and perhaps start the process that the Eurozone needs to become a viable union. If it succeeds, the average Greeks will still face a long period of economic hardship, but with the prospect of a better future, in a better environment. If not, Greece has no other viable option but to cut it's losses and go back to surviving as the poor, small country it was for two centuries at the south eastern border of Europe. If it can't be a part of the solution, it can at least stop being a part of the problem.


* First published in German translation by Hubertus Volmer, at  http://www.n-tv.de/wirtschaft/Teil-der-Loesung-nicht-Teil-des-Problems-article15347436.html




1 σχόλιο:

behave or be gone