World
Bank warns that euro collapse could spark global crisis
Europe
'facing Lehmans moment' says outgoing head Robert Zoellick as Greeks
are warned over key election
16
June, 2012
The
outgoing head of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, will warn the G20
summit that Europe runs the risk of sparking a Lehman-style global
crisis that will have dire consequences for developing nations.
As
Greek voters go to the polls in elections that could determine the
future of the eurozone, Zoellick told the Observer he was advising
emerging nations to ready themselves for the consequences of events
in the single-currency area.
The
election of an anti-austerity government would spark the most serious
crisis for the euro so far, following the apparent failure of a
Spanish bank bailout last week. German chancellor Angela Merkel
yesterday ruled out renegotiating Greece's bailout, saying the
country must stick to its deals with international lenders.
Unofficial polls suggest the conservative New Democracy party is
ahead of the anti-austerity Syriza by four percentage points —
though as much as 15% of the electorate remains undecided.
As
all eyes focus on Athens, Zoellick said: "Europe may be able to
muddle through but the risk is rising." He added: "There
could be a Lehmans moment if things are not properly handled."
The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 proved to be the
trigger for the deepest slump in the global economy since the 1930s,
and Zoellick said developing countries needed to "prepare for
the uncertainty coming out of the eurozone and the wider financial
markets". He added: "It will be better if they can avoid
piling up short-term debts that can come due in volatile periods and
look to the fundamentals of future growth – infrastructure and
human capital."
Zoellick,
whose five years at the bank has coincided with the financial and
economic crisis, retires at the end of the month. Fearing that
Europe's sovereign debt problems could have spillover effects, he
said the bank had been increasing its lending to support Bulgaria's
banking system and acting to prevent a credit crunch in south-east
Europe. Steps were also being taken to protect countries in north
Africa that were vulnerable to Europe's debt crisis and trade finance
facilities were being strengthened for francophone west Africa.
"Uncertainty
in markets is now starting to increase costs for developing
countries," he said. "The ripple effects are making
everybody's life harder." Zoellick said his organisation was
concentrating on helping developing countries to prepare projects
that could go ahead with the right investment and to protect the most
vulnerable if there was a second leg to the global downturn.
"Given
the volatility in the world economy, there is a big emphasis on
helping developing countries to develop social safety nets that don't
bust the budget," he said. Countries such as Mexico and Brazil,
he added, had shown they could do this using low-cost, effective
targeting, information technology and the right incentives.
While
the World Bank's sister organisation, the IMF, has been more directly
involved in the rescue operations for Greece, Ireland and Portugal,
Zoellick said that the bank had been monitoring events in Europe
carefully. Higher interest rates for countries such as Spain and
Italy, which have announced big structural reform programmes, were
the result both of market uncertainty and the failure of other
European countries to provide "the right backing" for the
governments in Madrid and Rome.
As
the former US trade representative, Zoellick said he was concerned
that the prolonged crisis was starting to lead to pressures for
protectionism and economic nationalism. "This is not just an
economic crisis but a political threat as well," he said. "We
must make sure we keep markets open and beware against creeping
protectionism. We are starting to see some increase in the use of
trade restrictions."
Several
European leaders urged Greeks to stick with the euro, including
Spain's prime minister Mariano Rajoy and Jean-Claude Juncker, who is
Luxembourg's prime minister and head of the group of eurozone finance
ministers.
"If
the radical left wins [in Greece] – which cannot be ruled out –
the consequences for the currency union are unforeseeable,"
Juncker told the Austrian newspaper Kurier. "I can only warn
everyone against leaving the currency union. The internal cohesion of
the euro zone would be in danger”.
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