GREECE:
It will leave the eurozone, even though it doesn’t want to
Greece
can’t live on thin air during August
23
July, 2012
The
media spotlight at the moment appears to be on Spain, when it isn’t
on the Olympics. But what it should be on is Greece.
In
the last two days, ominous speeches have emanated from the Bundestag
and Bankfurt. Greece, they say, is already backsliding. This whole
bailout thing, they insist, is an expensive joke.
Brussels
spokespersons point out that the next tranche of bailout cash isn’t
due until September.
The
IMF has publicly suggested it will not lend Greece any more money.
(Slog sources say that internally and secretly, the IMF has decided
not to lend the eurozone any more money).
“Significant
[Greek] delays in programme implementation have occurred due to the
double parliamentary elections in the spring,” said a faceless
Sprout this morning, adding “the decision on the next disbursement
will be taken in the near future, although it is unlikely to happen
before September”.
Hark:
no decision until September, and studious avoidance of any sign that
the decision will be positive in Greece’s favour.
This
morning, SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras urged the Athens government to
reject the austerity programme, as it was ‘programmed’ to produce
Greek default, and exit from the eurozone. The Slog first pointed
this out in April, complete with figures showing how Greece was
doomed to incur yet more debt by accepting the Brussels Accord.
The
date today is July 23rd. Slog contacts in Athens and Paris – and a
former bondholder representative – have concurred over the last 24
hours on one thing: Greece will default before that September money
comes through. In the Daily Telegraph later today (Monday) Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard is saying something very similar. Greece, he
suggests, “is being asphyxiated”.
Berlin-am-Brussels
is telling anyone prepared to concentrate that Greece is about to be
kicked out of the euro. In my view, within six months Alexis Tsipras
will be Prime Minister of a Greece returning to the Drachma.
I
doubt if this will be a drama for the EU – although it could well
be for Credit Agricole bank. In my opinion it will be good for
Greece. But the denouement in Spain and Italy will be the end for the
Fiskalunion…and the eurozone.
Berlin
is still, I believe, in a race with Athens to leave the euro first.
Stay tuned.
See also
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