Greece Considering Confiscation Of Private Assets
6
October, 2013
The
last time we opined on the possibility of a Cyprus-style "bail-in"
in Greece, which is essentially a legally-mandated confiscation of
private sector assets held hostage by the local financial system,
until such time as the balance sheet of said financial system is
viable, we
were joking.
Well, not really joking.
But
not even we thought that a banking sector "bail in", in
which unsecured bank liabilities, which include bonds and of course
deposits, are used as a matched source of extinguishment of
non-performing bad debt "assets" could spread to the
broader economy, and specifically to unencumbered private sector
assets. Alas, this is precisely what Greece, which is desperately to
delay the inevitable and announce it needs not only a third but
fourth bailout, appears keen on doing.
As Kathimerini
reports,
the Greek Labor and Social Insurance Ministry is "seriously
considering drastic measures in order to obtain the social security
contributions owed by enterprises and to avoid having to slash
pensions and benefits." What drastic measures? "The
ministry is planning to force companies to pay up or face
having their assets seized,
so that the 14 billion euros of contributions due can be recouped."
After
all, it's only "fair."
Kathimerini
is kind enough to layout the clear-cut problems with this plan which
will further crush any potential rebound in the Greek economy:
While this amount – equal to 8 percent of the country’s gross domestic product – may be easy to calculate on paper, it is virtually impossible to collect even if the state attempts to confiscate all the real estate properties of debtors and the debts of third parties to them.
The ministry has been forced to consider asset repossessions as a result of the very poor state of social security funds. The fiscal gap expected at the end of the year from social security will at best be equal to 1.06 billion euros. This also constitutes a bad start for next year, too, when the budget will also provide for a reduction in state subsidies to social security funds by 1.8 billion euros.
Aside
from the obvious, namely that this "plan" will be merely
the latest disaster to hit the long-suffering Greek economy, now
caught in the worst depression in history, and where greedy and
corrupt politicians will promptly "confiscate" whatever
benefits there are to have been made from this confiscation plan
(however instead of accusing corruption
all blame will be once again fall on (f)austerity),
the greater problem is that any entrepreneurial confidence that
Greece just may be a sound place to do business, has just gone out of
the window as nobody will know if they are safe from arbitrary
persecution, and subject to a wholesale asset confiscation at any
moment in time.
However,
none of the above gives us more confidence that things in Greece are
about to go from horrifying to nightmarish, than thefollowing
FT story:
"John
Paulson and a clutch of bullish US hedge funds are leading a charge
into Greek banks,
confident that Greece, long seen as the weakest economy of the
eurozone periphery, is on the turn."
Right.
A 360-degree turn.
The
good news: at least the Greek government will have a lot of "greater
fool" assets to pick and choose from when the confiscation
hammer hits.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.