GREECE’S
LONG-SUFFERING voters will go to the polls on Jan. 25 in a snap election that
pits Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’s ruling coalition against the radical
left-wing Syriza party led by Alexis Tsipras.
Greece could probably
face widespread bank failures and capital controls, while the rest of Europe
could face financial stress as bondholders began speculating on which of
Europe’s debtor countries would be next to go. University of California
economist Barry Eichengreen, an expert on the euro crisis, told a recent
conference of the American Economic Association that the potential fallout of a
“Grexit” from the euro could be as dire as the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in
2008 - except that Mr. Eichengreen says it “would be Lehman Brothers squared.”
Right now, both German
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government in Berlin and Syriza seem to be
approaching the situation the way German and Greek politicians have approached
previous chapters in the European debt crisis: as a game of chicken. By
broadcasting a take-it-or-leave it attitude to austerity, Germany seems to be
trying to tilt the election to Mr. Samaras, whose victory it would presumably
reward by tweaking the terms of Greece’s current bailout. Syriza’s defiant
campaign seems designed to convince Greeks that they should send someone as
inflexible as the Germans to the bargaining table.
Europe’s leaders need
to move instead from brinksmanship to a policy that would emphasize the shared
benefits of constructive behavior. Fiscal discipline and structural reform have
indeed begun to yield growth and balanced budgets in Athens and must be
continued whoever wins; the same goes for further stretching out of Greece’s
debt. Yet none of that will be sufficient to reduce Greece’s debt load - now
roughly 175 percent of national output - fast enough to ease the economic pain
that so understandably troubles Greek voters.
Mr. Eichengreen
proposes that, in addition to the more conventional forms of debt relief
already contemplated, official creditors - the European Central Bank,
International Monetary Fund and European governments led by Germany - sell
their Greek bonds at a discount to the private sector, for the purpose of
buying Greek firms, property and banks. These debt-for-equity swaps, modeled on
smaller-scale experiments during the Latin American debt crisis, would present
technical difficulties and would have to be phased in over several years, given
the paucity of attractive investments in Greece. Still, if coupled with
continued structural reforms, they could help shrink Greece’s manifestly
unpayable debt more quickly - while giving German and other taxpayers a share
of the eventual upside in return for their subsidy. Fresh thinking is a must,
lest Greece’s economic crisis spark a populist political fire that could engulf
Europe.
(Πηγή: washingtonpost.com)