Greece:
Death spiral ahead
How
the latest 'solution' to the debt crisis locks Europe into a grim
next chapter
By
JAMES K. GALBRAITH
17
July, 2015
The
Greek Parliament has now voted to surrender control of the Greek
state to platoons of bureaucrats from Brussels, Frankfurt and Berlin,
who will now re-impose the full policy regime against which Greeks
rebelled in January 2015 – and which they again rejected, by
overwhelming majority, in the referendum of July 5.
The
orders from Brussels will impose strict new rules on the Greek people
in the supposed interest of paying down Greece's debt. In return, the
Europeans and the IMF will put up enough new money so that they
themselves can appear to be repaid on schedule–thus increasing
Greece's debt–and the European Central Bank will continue to prop
up the Greek banking system.
A
hitch has already appeared in the plan: the International Monetary
Fund, whose approval is required, has pointed out—correctly— that
the Greek debt cannot be paid, and so the Fund cannot participate
unless the debt is restructured. Now Germany, Greece’s main
creditor, faces a new decision: either grant debt relief, or force
Greece into formal default, which would cause the ECB to collapse
Greece's banks and force the Greeks out of the Euro.
There
are many ways to rewrite debt, and let's suppose the Germans find one
they can live with. The question arises: What then?
An
end to the immediate crisis is likely to have some good near-term
effect. The Greek banks will “reopen,” likely on Monday, and the
European Central Bank will raise the ceiling on the liquidity
assistance on which they rely for survival. The ATMs will be filled,
although limits on cash withdrawals and on electronic transfers out
of the country will likely remain. There will be some talk of new
public investment, funded by the European Union; perhaps some stalled
road projects will restart.
With
these measures, it is not impossible that the weeks ahead will see a
small uptick of economic life, and certainly, any such will make big
news. It's also possible that even without good news, Greece may
limp along in stagnation, within the Euro.
But
if you walk through the requirements of Greece's new program, there
is another possibility. That possibility is an economic death spiral
– contraction leading to banking failure, banking failure leading
to contraction – first in Greece and, later on, elsewhere in
Europe.
Here's
what that would look like:
Value-added
tax rates – your basic regressive sales tax – will jump by ten
percentage points or more, to 23 percent, including for hotels and
restaurants and including on the Greek islands. This will divert
tourists to Turkey and elsewhere, damping Greece's largest industry.
Also, it will drive small businesses even further to cash and tax
evasion. This means other tax revenues will also fall.
Tax
revenues will rise at first, but then they will fall short of
targets, both because economic activity falls and evasion rises. As
this happens, the new program requires that public spending be cut
automatically. Since most public spending goes for pensions and
wages, this means that pensions and wages will be cut. Since
pensioners and civil servants live on these payments, they will cut
their spending – and tax revenues will fall further.
In
the labor market, extreme deregulation will proceed. Collective
bargaining will be suppressed; wages will therefore fall. As a
result, wage labor will go off-the-books, into cash, even more than
it already has, and pension contributions will decline again. The
resulting tax losses will feed back into pension cuts.
Privatization
will work through a required new fund that will, supposedly, hold 50
billion euro in Greek assets to be sold off (notwithstanding the
difficulty that, according to the Economy Minister, public assets on
that scale do not exist). Anyhow the state electricity company will
be sold, and electric rates will rise.
As
all this happens, even more people will default on their mortgages.
The judicial code will be rewritten to facilitate mass foreclosures,
so far held in abeyance. The non-performing-loans of the banking
system will then go from disastrous to catastrophic.
Now
then, under these conditions, what do you think will happen to the
banks?
It
is possible that a surge of “confidence” will now bring cash
deposits back to the banks, new inter-bank loans from North Europe,
new lending to small businesses, new jobs and economic growth.
Possible, but not likely.
Much
more likely, with every increase of the ceiling on Emergency
Liquidity Assistance (ELA), and every relaxation of capital controls,
people in Greece will line up to pull cash from the banking system.
They will do this because they have to, in order to live. They will
do this because cash avoids taxes. They will do it because any fool
can see that the banks are doomed. So deposits will go down, the ELA
will go up, still more loans will go bad, and the banks will continue
as zombies until – at some point – the European Central Bank
gives up and closes them down, this time for good. Greek depositors
will then lose what little remains.
Meanwhile,
let's return to the legal status of the new economic program. It is
true that the Greek parliament has approved it – as the Prime
Minister said, with a “knife to the neck.” But it is a point of
law that a contract signed under duress is not enforceable. This
point will be heard soon, and clearly, in Greek politics if not in
the courts.
It
will resonate, also, through Greek society. The free consent of the
governed is a right, which the Greek people have now been denied.
They will not take it lightly; one can expect both passive and active
resistance. Street conflict—not good for tourism—will become,
once again, routine. As this happens, the drachma will become a
symbol of national freedom.
Eventually,
the Greek majority – the 62 percent who voted “No” on July 5 –
will be heard from again. A government elected by that majority will
not go back to negotiations. Instead, it will repeal the program,
default on the debt, take the consequences and leave the euro.
So
within a few months or years, what has just happened will be
overturned and repudiated. And if the Greek banks have not failed
yet, they will then. At that point, Greece will be poorer than it
is, even now—but it will again be independent.
But
wait. The death spiral dynamic isn't necessarily limited to Greece.
It could start to happen in Spain, Portugal, Ireland, and perhaps
Italy – beginning, as it did in Greece, with a fall-off in
inter-bank loans from Northern Europe. Bankers, it turns out, are
often the first to start a run on other banks.
What
the Greek government tried to do, for five months, was to forestall
this dynamic, and to bring a glimmer of economic coherence – and
the potential for economic survival – to the Eurozone. It tried to
get its “partners” to recognize that economic policies that had
failed to produce predicted recovery for five years should be
reconsidered and changed. For this heresy, Greece was crucified, to
set an example. And an example it will become.
But
the lesson the good citizens of the other crisis countries will draw
may not be what their financial masters suppose. It may be, above
all, get to cash, as quickly as possible. And get out of the Euro as
soon as you can.
James
Galbraith's most recent book is The End of Normal. He teaches at The
University of Texas at Austin, and has been recently in Greece as a
friend of the former Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis
DISPATCH
Athens,
a City Scorned
The capital is in revolt. Has Prime Minister Tsipras dug his political grave?
17
July, 2015
HENS
— Marxist theorist Rosa Luxemburg once warned against pretending to
be a revolutionary: You draw all the ire that’s due a
revolutionary, yet you accomplish nothing. On Monday, July 13, Greek
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras agreed to a laundry list of austerity
measures that he had opposed viscerally — and publicly — for
months. Now, he’s being lashed with acrimony from every corner of
the Greek political field.
From
the right, Panos Kammenos, the defense minister and head of the
Independent Greeks party, Tsipras’s coalition partner, can no
longer uphold the semblance of a common front. In news conferences,
Kammenos openly denounces the terms that Tsipras has agreed to
implement. Further to the right, Ilias Kasidiaris, the spokesman of
the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party, shred to pieces a copy of the new
bailout terms while delivering a speech in Parliament on Wednesday.
But
the more damning critiques are coming from Tsipras’s left. Within
Left Platform, the more hard-line Marxist, anti-austerity faction of
Tsipras’s Syriza party, come the cries of prodosÃa (“betrayal”).
On Friday, Tsipras replaced two ministers who voted against accepting
the bailout. On the furthest fringes, mostly among the Communist
Party and Greece’s anarchist segments, the accusations get rowdier:
Tsipras is a Germanotsolias, a “Nazi collaborator.” The few who
dare to support the prime minister today are the ones who paved the
way for his electoral victory in January through their own
ineffectual handling of the country’s economic crisis — members
of the center-right New Democracy and center-left PASOK parties. Many
of these men and women despised him just days ago. But then both
parties have experienced what Tsipras must be feeling now.
The
sense that Syriza has betrayed its own principles is tangible all
over the streets of Athens. On Monday night, the day of Tsipras’s
capitulation, I walked down Vasilissis Sofias Avenue toward Syntagma
Square, where a protest against the new bailout terms had been
arranged, mostly by unionized dockworkers whose collective bargaining
rights will be largely eliminated under the privatization programs
that Syriza promised not to continue, but now must implement in order
for Greece to remain within the European Union. The first thing I saw
were police: battalions of the Units for the Reinstatement of Order,
or MAT, the widely despised thugs who have been the ground-level
enforcers of austerity measures, stamping out working-class
opposition to each new round of state-sector layoffs and wage cuts.
The
idea behind MAT goes back to the military junta that ruled Greece
from 1967 to 1974. The regime considered gatherings of Greeks in
public spaces dangerous. Many Syriza members cut their political
teeth during the student uprisings against the state brutality of
that time. Tsipras himself rose to power in part by criticizing the
repressive tactics of New Democracy and PASOK over the last six
years. In March, Giannis Panousis, the minister of citizen
protection, told me that the MAT would be demilitarized and
altogether disbanded within months. Yet here they were as I entered
Syntagma Square: a hundred or so officers sitting guard on the steps
of Parliament, decked out like soldiers, wielding batons and
shoulder-height fiberglass shields. For the last six months, the
majority of the protests in Athens have been in support of government
efforts to resist austerity measures. But now that protesters have
turned against the government, Syriza has brought these units back
out. “Didn’t expect this,” a crane operator named Dimitris from
the Piraeus suburb of Perama told me. “You know, many Syriza
politicians were actually with us, here, on the streets, fighting
against the police, before they made it there.” He pointed to the
Parliament building.
By
Wednesday the situation had turned violent. I arrived in Syntagma
Square at 9 p.m. to find the police deployed against a new wave of
demonstrators who had gathered to protest the austerity measures
narrowly passed through Parliament that night. Less than two weeks
prior, Tsipras had stood on a stage at this very spot, declaring that
democracy in Europe had been salvaged as he led tens of thousands of
Greeks in cries of “No!” Now, police officers were dragging
demonstrators from the crowd — some of them had turned violent, but
some of them had not — and had started pummeling them behind the
Parliament gates. A few of their victims were women. Tourists
(Germans among them) looked on in horror. Syriza ministers were
watching all this happen from the balconies of Parliament. Down at
street level, it was obvious what pleasure the police took in their
task. It had been six months since these men — about half of whom
are thought to have voted for Golden Dawn — had been given free
rein to smack down leftist teenagers. Now they got to do so on behalf
of a leftist government.
Down
Panepistimiou Street marched a column of several thousand union
members associated with the All Workers Militant Front. Those on the
edge of the mass were keeping the march in order, holding flagpoles
horizontally like a fence. From loudspeakers came chants. “Down
with Europe’s plutocracy!” I spotted someone I recognized, a
mechanic from Pakistan called Farooq, in the crowd. “We are the
workers!” On the right-hand side of the street, teenagers clad in
black — mostly the anarchists and the unemployed — were fending
off the advancing police, hurling bottles and rocks and calling them
fascist pigs as the youth dared them to come closer. The police fired
canisters of tear gas at the anarchists, who in response set a TV
satellite van on fire. Dumpsters were overturned and set ablaze in
order to break up the police formations. The headlights of passing
police trucks were bashed out with sticks.
Greeks
are exhausted and confused by their ongoing purgatory. At this point
they are paying the price for Tsipras’s miscalculations but are now
shorn of the prospect that relief may be within sight. Capital
controls implemented on June 29 — 60 euro daily withdrawal limits
for Greeks, 300 for foreigners — will be enforced for at least the
next month, though probably longer. It wasn’t clear at the time
what the July 5 referendum was about, but it’s clear now that its
outcome was meaningless: Greeks voted overwhelmingly “no” to
austerity measures that were agreed upon anyway. This time the
suffering will be even worse. Forecasts project a 4 percent recession
in the Greek economy by the end of the year. Greeks who had expected
to retire this year will have to wait two more. Public services
reopened by Syriza — the Greek public broadcasting service, for
instance — will likely be shut back down; the jobs that were
restored along with their reopenings will also go.
A
schism now runs through Syriza. On Wednesday about half the party,
primarily members of the Left Platform, broke into open revolt
against Tsipras, refusing to endorse the austerity measures on which
he had signed off. This likely marks the end of Syriza as a political
entity. Greeks will probably head to the polls again in September for
fresh elections. Their options, never many, will be even fewer.
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