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07-05-2015 #1
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A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
I thought I would detach this reply to the ongoing debate on the EU Referendum with a note on Greece, prompted by the reply from Sukumvit boy below.
The situation with Greece is either intensely complex or blatantly obvious -but the issue of lying is more related to Greece's entry into the Euro in 2001 rather than with its entry into the EU in 1981.
The criteria for membership of the Euro that were drawn up -as early as 1992- which were supposed to be applied to candidates applying for entry included the rule that a member's budget deficit not be higher than 3% of its GDP. Another rule is to show how it can reduce the deficit year on year.
When Greece applied in 2001, it claimed that its budget deficit was 1.5% whereas in fact it was around 8.3%. The sleight of hand in accounting that the Greeks produced meant that, for example, a loss making business such as the Greek railway network was not in fact shown to be losing a billion Euros a year, which it was -the network had more employees than passengers at the time- but not losing at all, as the railway company issued shares which were purchased by the government, thereby transforming a debt into a financial investment. On their part the European Central Bank and the European Commission failed to do the due diligence to obtain a more accurate profile of the Greek economy, and let's face it it was not that hard to do.
In addition, and more controversially, the Greek government was advised by Goldman Sachs to use credit swaps to hide more than $2.8 bn worth of debt by conducting the transaction of government bonds in private with a single bank, rather than offering the bonds for sale on the open market, though this did mean that the Greek government now owed Goldman Sachs $2.8bn. You can follow this in the programme in the BBC link here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17108367
Now add in the 'investment' that the Greek government made to host the Olympic Games in 2004 at a cost of 9 billion euros -just don't ask what the financial return on this investment was (!)-, but also add in the devastating fact that with historical low interest rates in the financial markets, the Greeks allowed themselves to believe that they could borrow more than usual because of the low cost of borrowing, while the banks were happy to lend.
From this perspective, you can blame the Greek governments -both the left-wing PASOK and the right-wing New Democracy parties, for racking up more debt than they could repay, but also ask yourself who lent them the money in the first place? The irony, perhaps the bitter irony of Greece's economy, is that agriculture composes 3.5% of the economy, industry, including shipping and tourism composes 16%, while 80% is made up of services, of which the largest proportion is...yes, you guessed it, banking. The largest companies in Greece are Piraeus Bank, Alpha Bank, the National Bank of Greece, Hellenic Telecoms, Motor Oil, Public Power and Hellenic Petroleum. Something like 22% of the workforce are state employees, but if you then consider that in Sweden it is over 33% you might begin to realise that whatever Greece is good at financial management is not it. Apart from the fabulous nonsense of the Olympic Games, the arms manufacturers of the USA went smiling to the bank as Greece spent a substantial amount of its crisp new Euros on its military, the one that can't stop thousands of migrants from North Africa landing on its islands (now there is a clash of aspirations if ever there was one, to flee from civil war to economic chaos!).
The current situation is that today, Sunday July 5th, the Greeks are voting in a referendum on a ballot question that related to a financial package that has since been superseded, so that in policy terms it is irrelevant, whereas voting in favour of the package on the ballot form is assumed to be a vote to remain in the Euro, whereas a vote No is a vote of defiance.
The logical outcomes of this mess are:
a) Greece is forced out of the Euro zone, and the EU; or
b) Greece is forced out of the Eurozone but not the EU, ie it re-establishes its own curency and behaves like the UK which is also not part of the Eurozone (neither is Denmark);
c) Greece re-negotiates another package which includes the total cancellation of its outstanding debt, the re-capitalisation of its banks, but severe cuts to its state budget including pensions resulting in a shrinkage of the state sector by at least 50% and no prospects of economic growth for ten years.
In other words, Greece will have the basic cash to carry on without descending into civil war, but unless it finds substantial barrels of oil or fields of gold and diamonds, it will have to rely for its income on shipping, and tourism on the assumption that Greece will be the cheapest holiday destination in Europe, if not the happiest. The phrase 'We've been kebabbed' seems cruelly appropriate in this instance.
One alternative is that the Chinese, who have invested huge sums into the port of Piraeus in order to bring it yp to the scale of Rotterdam and Hamburg, could be persuaded to invest even more -they are more cash rich than the Russians and may relish the opportunity to deepen their investments in the EU. A longer term prospect is that if Greece remains in the EU and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) with the USA is concluded, the US can invest in Greece at favourable terms, can you resist it America?
Spare a thought for countries like Latvia and Estonia, poorer even than Greece, who will lose out if the debt is cancelled.
But ask yourself what would happen if, to take a wild example, California were to go bankrupt owing billions. Would it be forced out of the Dollar or the USA?
The moral of this story is so tired it ought not to be told, but is simply: Politicians lie all the time, so don't believe them! And, Don't borrow more money than you will ever be able to pay back.
It's when governments and institutions ignore the basic rules that the rules get broken and systems buckle and break in return.
1 out of 1 members liked this post.Last edited by Stavros; 07-05-2015 at 03:49 PM.
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07-06-2015 #2
Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
Brilliant overview , very helpful ,thank you. More complex than I realized.
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07-06-2015 #3
Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
Don't know how accurate this is, but some of it did kind of make me chuckle:
http://nypost.com/2015/07/05/decades...t-of-billions/
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07-06-2015 #4
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Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
The cynical way in which people at the bottom milk the system is reflected in the cynical way that people at the top milk it. Perfectly sighted people claiming benefits for the blind are doing the same thing as billionaires not paying taxes, or Members of the UK Parliament fiddling their expenses so that when they want bookshelves in their apartment they charge it to the taxpayer most of whom earn substantially less in wages than MPs. That this happens in the EU is beyond doubt, but it happens in most places, and until it is rigorously policed -if such policing can be afforded- it will continue. It doesn't look so bad until there is an economic crisis, and then you see the cracks and it is scary.
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07-06-2015 #5
Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
27 Feb 1953 - the day Greece cancelled half of Germany's debt
http://jubileedebt.org.uk/reports-br...anys-debt-1953
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07-08-2015 #6
Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
A few figures
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07-08-2015 #7
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Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
But Martin, the banks became too big to fail. Greece accounts for 2% of the EU's economy -well, it was 2%....I think part of the problem is that when the Euro was created they did not build into it the mechanism for an orderly withdrawal if something went wrong. There is a view that the whole project was not only doomed from the start but that the UK's crashing out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism in 1992 was an early example of how things can go wrong. I recall with some pain the 15% interest rates at the time -unthinkable today. If interest rates were raised to 5% the economy -the housing market for sure?- would probably collapse.
Mary Anne Sieghart wrote about this a few years ago
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/...d-6296580.html
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07-08-2015 #8
Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
Basic problem with the Euro is that its exchange rate and loan requirements are set once across the EU, while the ability of individual member states to match the usual loan conditions should be at state level. So Greece and other members states borrowed too cheaply against their own GDP.
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07-09-2015 #9
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Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
Hmm, I've never been to Greece, I'd like to, maybe a Greco-Roman holiday exploring all those old ruins. My niece said Greece is a dirty place, as in trash all over the streets dirty. My experience in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria was those countries have it more together than the States, the cities are cultural meccas, the countryside is beautiful- all the windows have flower boxes. Beautiful but everything is expensive.
Greece is like the American Ghet-toe, money goes in but doesn't come out. Indiginous Populants drink ouzo all day and collect their unemployment, disability, and welfare checks.
You can't really call it Europe without Greece, as an outsider I hope they pull it off, I dunno, flip a coin.
World Class Asshole
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07-10-2015 #10
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Re: A note on the Crisis in Greece, via the EU Referendum post
Last night (9th July 2015) the Greek Government submitted its latest proposals to the Troika -the EU, the European Central Bank and the IMF.
The proposals show that Greece is prepared to make significant changes to its domestic economic and fiscal policy. These will include:
-changes to VAT which will rise for most commodities, to 23% in the case of theatres and restaurants, but not in the islands which are dependent on tourism for their income;
-increasing retirement age to 67 over the next seven years;
-increasing corporation tax to the IMF's favoured figure of 28% -Greece had wanted to raise it to 29%;
-military spending cut to $100m for the rest of 2015, and $200m in 2016, meaning Greece will not be able to meet NATO's spending target on defence at 2% of GDP;
-reforms to improve tax collection and to combat tax evasion;
-the privatisation of state assets such as ports and airports -although many MPs are opposed to this.
These proposals are made in order to persuade the Troika to authorise a $53.5bn loan to Greece to enable it to begin the process of re-structuring both the economy and the debt.
The proposals expose the Greek government to the wrath of its MPs, and appear to show that the referendum which rejected many of the proposals now being offered was a waste of time, which is in any case true of most referenda.
The proposals are more in line with the proposals of the IMF, so perhaps it is not surprising that Christine Lagarde did not attend the meeting in Brussels earlier this week which set the deadline which the Greeks met last night.
But it does now expose Mrs Merkel to opposition in Germany and, indeed, in her own party where Germans feel the Greeks are asking too much of them, again and again and again. The intervention of the US Government, which has expressed concern that the crisis threatens the integrity of the EU, is an additional pressure on Mrs Merkel, while the French Prime Minister, Manuel Valls has declared that Greece must remain a member of the Eurozone. It is even possible that Mrs Merkel might not survive this crisis as leader of her party.
But it is futile at this stage to predict what happens next -there is opposition to these proposals in both Greece and Germany, but the options are limited. The harsh reality is that most of Greece's debt is never going to be repaid, but just as harsh is that the quality of life in Greece is going to decline for most people in work over the next ten years, if they are in work. Opposition to the proposals in Greece could lead to the collapse of the government there and new elections, yet the next government is likely to be more congenial to the Troika than Syriza.
We are in that weird dimension where the only progress that can be made, comes from a lose-lose situation. In other words, we still haven't reached that rock bottom from which the only way is up. To call it a rocky ride is an under-statement.
http://www.theguardian.com/business/...as-draghi-live
Last edited by Stavros; 07-10-2015 at 11:01 AM.
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