The
Lesson From Cyprus: Europe Is Politically Bankrupt
Raul
Ilargi Meijer
26
March, 2013
Over
the past week, Europe, or rather the present EU leadership, has done
damage to itself it will never be able to repair.
It
seems to escape everbody, but that doesn't make it any less true:
people from Portugal to Spain to Italy to Greece to Cyprus and
Ireland are worse off today than they were when they first adopted
the euro. Moreover, their economies are all getting worse as we speak
and projected to plunge further. The once highly touted blessings of
the common currency are by now lost on most of southern Europe; for
them, the euro has been a shortcut to disaster.
Until
Cyprus, the EU had always maintained two prime objectives (and spent
€5 trillion over 5 years to prove it): keeping all members in the
eurozone, and guaranteeing all bank deposits under €100,000. These
objectives exist from now on only in words. Brussels has threatened
to both grab deposits of small savers and throw Cyprus out of the
monetary union. Two watershed moments in one.
The
membership of the European Union, the subsequent introduction of the
euro and the seemingly endless flow of credit that came with these
"privileges" provided the region with a temporary illusion
of increasing wealth and new-found prosperity. Today it knows that
none of it was real, or earned; it was all borrowed. It's time to pay
up but there's no money left. It needs to be borrowed. From the
European core and its banking system.
The
EU's financial scorched earth strategies have left its Mediterranean
members with highly elevated unemployment rates, fast rising taxation
levels, huge cuts to pensions, benefits and services and above all
insanely high debt levels, personal, corporate and sovereign. And
now, as ironic as it is cynical, their savings. The only thing that
keeps the nations from going bankrupt is more debt, largely in the
form of ECB loans.
What
sets Cyprus apart from the other victims of Brussels' expansion
hunger is the timing. The country (actually only the Greek-Cypriot
59% of the island of Cyprus) was only allowed entry in the EU in
2004, and it didn't introduce the euro until 2008. At that point,
total bank assets were already well over €80 billion, or a very
unhealthy 450% of GDP, and kept on rising with a vengeance. Four
years later, in early 2012, the EU/ECB/IMF troika forced €4.5
billion in losses on the Cyprus banking system through the haircut on
Greek sovereign debt. Now, one year after that, the same troika
forces Cyprus to cough up €5.8 billion. No great math skills
required: Cyprus was essentially pushed under the bus in order to -
temporarily - save Greece.
The
EU, with all its 1000s of highly paid employees and its multiheaded
leadership structure, time and again fails to do its overseeing job,
and then conceals this by turning around and bullying the victims of
its failures. Of course they knew what state Cyprus was in when it
switched to the euro, and the country should never have been allowed
to enter. And of course the EU and ECB leadership knew all along what
happened in Cyprus between 2008 and now, or at least should have.
It's their job to know. Hence, the leaders should be fired either for
not knowing or for knowing and not acting. They just cost taxpayers
yet another grab bag full of billions, and they should be held
accountable for that.
The
problem is they're not accountable to anyone for anything they do,
other than in name. Or put it this way: people like Van Rompuy,
Barroso and Olli Rehn are not accountable to anyone but themselves,
each other and Angela Merkel's entourage. There's a great word in the
English language to describe their attitude; the ancient Greek
"hubris". Add a side dish of arrogance and incompetence and
you have a lethal combination.
By
the way, here's how European democracy works: when the whip comes
down, everybody will do what Berlin wants. Germany has some 24% of
the EU population, and Angela Merkel's ruling party (through a
coalition) has maybe a third of all votes. That means perhaps 20
million Germans, or at best 6% of the 332 million people in the
Eurozone, decide what goes and what does not.
Hubris
makes stupid (or, granted, it could be the other way around). That's
why we saw the following over the past week:
1)
The announcement of the initial Cyprus plan, the one that included a
6.75% tax for all deposits below €100,000. It doesn't matter that
it's no longer in the final plan, the "deposit grab" genie
has left the bottle and will never return. It's like breaking an egg;
restoring confidence is no longer an option. No European small saver
will feel safe again for decades, and many will take much of their
deposits out of their banks, which will push banks over the edge,
requiring more bailouts, rinse and repeat.
The
troika, joined by German finance minister Schäuble, went out of
their way to put all the blame for this on the Cyprus government (the
ball was in their park), but given the obvious potential consequences
(the devastating loss of trust), they should never have allowed
either the responsibility or the blame to be there; it was theirs to
take. That they didn't, leads to point 2:
2)
Brussels and Frankfurt can neither oversee nor control the
consequences of their actions. The trust issue is just one of many
topics that have made this clear. And as long as the present
leadership structure remains in place, what happened in Cyprus will
keep on happening, because:
3)
They don't care. They don't care that the entire southern part of
their union is falling over the edge. They don't care what happens to
the people in the streets of Nicosia, or Porto, or Sevilla, their
jobs, their savings, their well-being, their children. They're not
accountable to those people. They're untouchables as far as democracy
goes in all but the most cynical definition.
Imagine
you're a cleaning lady or a primary school teacher, or you have a
small grocery store or a bakery, in a town somewhere in Spain or
Italy or Portugal. At home, you've already been hit with huge tax
rises and budget cuts. But there's one thing you can count on to
stand between you from things getting real bad: the savings in your
bank. And then you see on TV what's happening in Cyprus. Where people
had the same deposit guarantee you had, until from one day to the
next they didn't. What would you do with what's left in your bank
account?
People
with bank accounts in Cyprus no longer have access to their money.
They'll be stuck in a repeat of Argentina's early milennium capital
controls for months. People in Spain and Portugal still have a
choice. Maybe not for long, because at the first hint of capital
flight to the backyard bank, control over your own money will very
rapidly become a thing of the past.
The
only reason for Europe's Mediterranean nations to remain in the
eurozone and the EU will be bullying from Brussels and Berlin. It's
this bullying from the core, from those who preach union above all
else, which will be the undoing of the entire project, but after a
lot more pain of the same kind that now hit the Cypriots will have
spread north (the rot won't stop).
Unless
first one country and then inevitably others - soon - decide to
leave, say thanks for all the fish, and (re-)build their own nation.
That would be by far the best choice for all of southern Europe.
Staying in the union has nothing positive to offer anyone anymore,
except for those presently in power in Brussels and in the capitals
of the rich core nations. The dissolution of the union is inevitable.
Unfortunately, given the hubris in the core, so is the bloodshed that
will pave the way there.
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