Greece
faces stark election choice – in or out of the euro
Collapse
of coalition talks plunges eurozone into fresh turmoil as EU
policymakers work on plans for post-Greek single currency
15
May, 2012
Europe
is facing a month of political and economic upheaval after the
failure of nine days of coalition talks in Greece prompted fears on
Tuesday that a fresh election in the crisis-torn country would herald
the start of the breakup of the single currency.
In
what was being seen in the financial markets as an "in or out"
referendum on membership of the 17-nation eurozone, party leaders in
Athens called a second poll next month once it became clear that they
were unable to piece together a national unity government to manage
Greece's biggest crisis in modern times.
Karolos
Papoulias, the president of Greece, finally admitted defeat in his
attempts to form a government and the date of the new election –
either 10 June or 17 June – will be announced on Wednesday.
The
collapse of talks sent tremors through financial markets and prompted
warnings from Germany's finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, that
Greece would have to stick to its hardline austerity programme in
order to continue to receive the bailout cash needed to pay
government salaries and support troubled banks.
Europe's
policymakers are now actively working on plans to minimise the
fallout from a possible Greek departure from the single currency
after an election in which the anti-austerity Syriza party is
expected to increase its support. Christine Lagarde, managing
director of the International Monetary Fund, said she wanted Greece
to stay in the euro but said the IMF had to be "technically
prepared for anything".
News
of the political impasse in Athens put paid to a modest rally in
European markets on Tuesday caused by the surprise news that growth
of 0.5% in Germany spared the eurozone collectively from the
double-dip recession suffered by Britain.Growth in the monetary union
area ground to a halt in the first three months of 2012, although the
picture would have looked less rosy had statisticians in Europe
followed the UK tradition of adjusting data for the extra working day
in a leap year.
David
Owen, economist at Jefferies, said that in Germany alone the
leap-year effect would added 0.4 percentage points to growth over a
full year.
Official
figures released on Tuesday showed that Italy's economy had shrunk by
1.3% over the past year, Spain had contracted by 0.4% and Greece by
6.2%. The length and depth of the slump in Greece – which has seen
a 20% drop in output in the past four years – has led to the
growing popularity for parties of left and right opposed to the terms
of the €130bn bailout package agreed earlier this year.
No
group won enough votes, however, to have a working majority in
Athens's 300-seat parliament and parties that backed the terms of the
bailout lost support.
The
euro fell to its lowest in three and a half years against the pound
on the foreign exchanges, while concern that a Greek exit from the
single currency would have a domino effect pushed shares in Spain to
their lowest in nine years. The interest rates paid by the Italian
and Spanish governments for their 10-year borrowing were both above
the key 6% level as concerns grew that the eurozone's third and
fourth biggest economies might need bailouts from the IMF and the
European Union.
A
caretaker government will replace the outgoing left-right coalition,
led by the technocrat banker Lucas Papademos, as the nation prepares
for another round of election campaigning.
Attributing
the breakdown to "petty party interests", Evangelos
Venizelos, who heads the socialist Pasok, said he hoped the next
decision of Greek voters would be more mature. "Unfortunately
the country is being led again to elections … under very bad
conditions," he said. "The country can find its way again,"
the politician insisted, before urging citizens to read the minutes
of the two-hour-long talks. "Let's choose to go towards the
better. In God's name, let it not be worse."
Like
its longtime rival New Democracy, Pasok was pummelled in the 6 May
election, a ballot that will be remembered for reconfiguring Greece's
political map.
Athens
is not only dependent on rescue funds from its "troika" of
creditors – the European Union, the European Central Bank and the
International Monetary Fund – that rushed to prop up its ailing
economy in May 2010. It is also running out of money fast.
With
an €18bn cash injection for the banking system put on hold, a
senior official in the outgoing government admitted there were
concerns over whether Greece could "make it" until the next
election.
"It
is a real issue," he told the Guardian. "The economy is in
very bad shape. "The banks have no money. There is no liquidity.
It is vital that this cash injection is released by the EFSF [the
EU's emergency rescue fund]."
Jonathan
Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, said: "There
is now a considerable danger Greece simply runs out of money next
month – that it can't pay wages, can't run public transport, can't
maintain infrastructure and that the country just descends into
complete chaos."
Greece's
eurozone partners are likely to spend the next few weeks ratcheting
up the pressure on the country's voters to back parties prepared to
stick to the spending cuts, wage reductions, tax increases and
privatisation included in the austerity programme. But the economist
Nouriel Roubini said he expected Syriza, which wants to "tear up
the barbaric accord" to emerge victorious, leading eventually to
default and exit from the euro.
Chris
Beauchamp, market analyst at IG Index, said: "The reality now is
that there will be elections in mid-June, and at present the
anti-bailout, leftwing Syriza party is poised to win a majority.
"If
it does, it is pledged to abandon most austerity measures, which
would result in the halting of bailout payments and likely result in
the exit of Greece from the euro. After two years, this event now
seems inevitable, barring some major turnaround in the Greek
political climate."
Couldn't
find much on this in the print media, but it was headlines on Radio
New Zealand. Here is what they had to say.
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