Guardians
of financial stability are deliberately provoking a bank run and endangering
Europe's system in their zeal to force Greece to its knees.
The
spectacle is astonishing. The European Central Bank, the EMU bail-out fund, and
the International Monetary Fund, among others, are lashing out in fury against
an elected government that refuses to do what it is told. They entirely duck
their own responsibility for five years of policy blunders that have led to
this impasse.
They want
to see these rebel Klephts hanged from the columns of the Parthenon – or
impaled as Ottoman forces preferred, deeming them bandits - even if they
degrade their own institutions in the process.
If we want
to date the moment when the Atlantic liberal order lost its authority – and
when the European Project ceased to be a motivating historic force – this may
well be it. In a sense, the Greek crisis is the financial equivalent of the
Iraq War, totemic for the Left, and for Souverainistes on the Right, and
replete with its own “sexed up” dossiers.
Does
anybody dispute that the ECB – via the Bank of Greece - is actively inciting a
bank run in a country where it is also the banking regulator by issuing this
report on Wednesday?
It warned
of an "uncontrollable crisis" if there is no creditor deal, followed
by soaring inflation, "an exponential rise in unemployment", and a
"collapse of all that the Greek economy has achieved over the years of its
EU, and especially its euro area, membership".
The
guardian of financial stability is consciously and deliberately accelerating a
financial crisis in an EMU member state - with possible risks of pan-EMU and
broader global contagion – as a negotiating tactic to force Greece to the
table.
It did so
days after premier Alexis Tsipras accused the creditors of "laying
traps" in the negotiations and acting with a political motive. He more or
less accused them of trying to destroy an elected government and bring about
regime change by financial coercion.
I leave it
to lawyers to decide whether this report is a prima facie violation of the
ECB’s primary duty under the EU treaties. It is certainly unusual. The ECB has
just had to increase emergency liquidity to the Greek banks by €1.8bn (enough
to last to Monday night) to offset the damage from rising deposit flight.
In its
report, the Bank of Greece claimed that failure to meet creditor demands would
“most likely” lead to the country’s ejection from the European Union. Let us be
clear about the meaning of this. It is not the expression of an opinion. It is
tantamount to a threat by the ECB to throw the Greeks out of the EU if they
resist.
This is not
the first time that the ECB has strayed far from its mandate. It forced the
Irish state to make good the claims of junior bondholders of Anglo-Irish Bank,
saddling Irish taxpayers with extra debt equal to 20pc of GDP.
This was
done purely in order to save the European banking system at a time when the ECB
was refusing to do the job itself, betraying the primary task of a central bank
to act as a lender of last resort.
It sent
secret letters to the elected leaders of Spain and Italy in August 2011
demanding detailed changes to internal laws for which it had no mandate or
technical competence, even meddling in neuralgic issues of labour law that had
previously led to the assassination of two Italian officials by the Red
Brigades. It demanded changes to the Spanish constitution.
When
Italy’s Silvio Berlusconi balked, the ECB switched off bond purchases, driving
10-year yields to 7.5pc. He was forced from office in a back-room coup d’etat,
albeit one legitimised by the ageing ex-Stalinist EU fanatic who then happened
to be president of Italy.
Lest we
forget, it parachuted in its vice-president – Lucas Papademos – to take over
Greece when premier George Papandreou merely suggested that he might submit the
EMU bail-out package to a referendum, a wise idea in retrospect. That makes two
coups d’etat. Now Syriza fears they are angling for a third.
The
creditor power structure has lost its way. The IMF is in confusion. It is
enforcing a contractionary austerity policy in Greece – with no debt relief,
exchange cushion, or offsetting investment - that has been discredited by its
own elite research department as scientifically unsound.
The Fund’s
culpability in this fiasco is by now well known. As I argued last week, its own
internal documents show that the original bail-out in 2010 was designed to
rescue the EMU banking system and monetary union at a time when it had no
defences against contagion. Greece was sacrificed.
One should
have thought that the IMF would wish to lower the political temperature, given
that its own credibility and long-term survival are at stake. But no, Christine
Lagarde has upped the political ante by stating that Greece will fall into
arrears immediately if it misses a €1.6bn payment to the Fund on June 30.
In my view,
this is a discretionary escalation. The normal procedure is to notify the IMF
Board after 30 days. This period is a de facto grace period, and in a number of
past cases the arrears were cleared up quietly during the interval before the
matter ever reached the Board.
The IMF
could have let this process run in the case of Greece. It has chosen not to do
so, ostensibly on the grounds that the sums are unusually large.
Klaus
Regling, head of the eurozone bail-out fund (EFSF), entered on cue to hint
strongly that his organisation would trigger cross-default clauses on its Greek
bonds – 45pc of the Greek package – even though there is no necessary reason
why it should do so. It is an optional matter for the EFSF board.
He seems to
be threatening an EFSF default, even though the Greeks themselves are not doing
so, a remarkable state of affairs.
It is
obvious what is happening. The creditors are acting in concert. Instead of
stopping to reflect for one moment on the deeper wisdom of their strategy, they
are doubling down mechanically, appearing to assume that terror tactics will
cow the Greeks at the twelfth hour.
Personally,
I am a Burkean conservative with free market views. Ideologically, Syriza is
not my cup tea. Yet we Burkeans do like democracy – and we don’t care for
monetary juntas – even if it leads to the election of a radical-Left
government.
As it
happens, Edmund Burke would have found the plans presented to the Eurogroup
last night by finance minister Yanis Varoufakis to be rational, reasonable,
fair, and proportionate.
They
include a debt swap with ECB bonds coming due in July and August exchanged for
bonds from the bail-out fund. They would have longer maturities and lower
interest rates, reflecting the market borrowing cost of the creditors.
Syriza said
from the outset that it was eager to work on market reforms with the OECD, the
leading authority. It wants to team up with the International Labour
Organisation on Scandinavian style flexi-security and labour reforms, a valid
alternative to the German-style Hartz IV reforms that have impoverished the
bottom fifth of German society and which no Left-wing movement can stomach.
It wished
to push through a more radical overhaul of the Greek state that anything yet
done under five years of Troika rule – and much has been done, to be fair.
As Mr
Varoufakis told Die Zeit: “Why does a kilometer of freeway cost three times as
much where we are as it does in Germany? Because we’re dealing with a system of
cronyism and corruption. That’s what we have to tackle. But, instead, we’re
debating pharmacy opening times."
The Troika
pushed privatisation of profitable state assets at knock-down depression prices
to private monopolies, to the benefit of an entrenched elite. To call that
reforms invites a bitter cynicism.
The only
reason that the Troika pushed this policy was in order to extract money. It was
acting at a debt collector. “The reforms were a smokescreen. Whenever I tried
talking about proposals, they were bored. I could see it in their body language,"
Mr Varoufakis told me.
The truth
is that the creditor power structure never even looked at the Greek proposals.
They never entertained the possibility of tearing up their own stale,
discredited, legalistic, fatuous Troika script.
The
decision was made from the outset to demand strict enforcement of the terms
agreed in the original Memorandum, which even the last conservative pro-Troika
government was unable to implement - regardless of whether it makes any sense,
or actually increases the chance that Germany and other lenders will recoup
their money.
At best, it
is bureaucratic inertia, a prime exhibit of why the EU has become unworkable,
almost genetically incapable of recognising and correcting its own errors. At
worst, it is nasty, bullying, insistence on ritual capitulation for the sake of
it.
We all know
the argument. The EU is worried about political “moral hazard”, about what
Podemos might achieve in Spain, or the eurosceptics in Italy, or the Front
National in France, if Syriza is seen to buck the system and get away with it.
But do the
proponents of this establishment view – and one hears it a lot – really think
that Podemos can be defeated by crushing Syriza, or that they can discourage
Marine Le Pen by violating the sovereignty and sensibilities of a nation?
Do they
think that the EU’s ever-declining hold on the loyalty of Europe’s youth can be
reversed by creating a martyr state on the Left? Do they not realize that this
is their own Guatemala, the radical experiment of Jacobo Arbenz that was
extinguished by the CIA in 1954, only to set off the Cuban revolution and
thirty years of guerrilla warfare across Latin America? Don’t these lawyers –
and yes they are almost all lawyers - ever look beyond their noses?
The
Versailles victors assumed reflexively that they had the full weight of moral
authority on their side when they imposed their Carthiginian settlement on a
defeated Germany in 1919 and demanded the payment of debts that they themselves
invented. History judged otherwise.
(Πηγή: telegraph.co.uk)
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