A Simple Guide to the Unfolding Financial Drama in Greece

Irrespective of the outcome of Sunday’s referendum, one thing is certain: the Greek debt crisis saga is not going to end very soon

Cut the debt. Credit: Denis Bocquet/Flickr
Cut the debt. Credit: Denis Bocquet/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

Cut the debt. Credit: Denis Bocquet/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

The Greek debt saga continues with no resolution in sight. As expected, the European leaders rejected a last-minute proposal by Alexis Tsipras, Prime Minister of Greece, requesting an extension of the bailout program that expired on June 30 and seeking a new €29.1 billion bailout package that could have covered the country’s debt obligations over the next two years.

The rejection led the country to default on its €1.6 billion loan repayment to the International Monetary Fund. Greece is the first developed country to so default. Even though the IMF does not use the term, it will now classify Greece as being “in arrears” and the country will only receive funds in future once the arrears are cleared.

After several rounds of protracted negotiations in Brussels, Greece had rejected the anti-austerity conditions contained in the bailout package prepared by the troika (i.e. the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF). The troika demanded substantial cuts in pension and wages besides overhauling value-added tax as a precondition for releasing the remaining funds from the bailout package which expired on Tuesday. Disappointed over the rigid stand taken by troika, Tsipras announced on June 27 a referendum to decide whether or not Greece should accept the bailout conditions. The referendum will take place on July 5.

On June 28, the Greek government imposed capital controls and other regulatory measures to maintain liquidity and stability in the banking system. These include:

  • All banks in the country will remain closed for a week (June 29-July 6, 2015).
  • An individual can withdraw up to €60 per card a day from ATM.
  • Foreign bank cards are exempted from this daily limit.
  • Transfer of money outside Greece will require approval from the official authorities.
  • A specialised agency will deal with urgent payments that cannot be met through cash withdrawals or electronic transactions.

By announcing a referendum, the Greek government has put the ball in the people’s court. It is hard to predict the outcome of the forthcoming referendum. It is likely that a No vote would strengthen the bargaining power of the current government which came to power on an anti-austerity platform in January 2015. A Yes vote would, of course, make the government’s position untenable and probably lead to general elections.

The story of public debt

No discussion on the Greek debt crisis would be complete without analysing how the country’s public debt got accumulated over the years. In 2004, the country’s public debt was €183.2 billion. By 2009, it reached as high as €299.5 billion, or 127 percent of the country’s GDP.

Currently, Greece’s public debt stands at €323 billion, nearly 175 percent of country’s GDP. Both critics and supporters of Greek’s government admit that such a high debt-GDP ratio is unsustainable. The current government is seeking a substantial write-off of country’s debt so as to put it back on a growth trajectory. While seeking debt relief for Greece, several economists and legal experts have referred to the London Agreement in 1953 which gave generous debt relief to West Germany by writing off 50 percent of its debt, accumulated after the world wars. This debt relief was one of the key factors which enabled the reemergence of Germany as a world economic power in the post-war period.

In 2015, the Greek parliament set up a Committee on the Truth about the Public Debt to investigate how the country’s foreign debt got accumulated from 1980 to 2014. The committee has recently released a preliminary report which states that Greek public debt is largely illegitimate and odious. I would earnestly request readers to read this report as it confronts several popular myths associated with the Greek public debt. According to the report, the increase in debt before 2010 was not due to excessive public spending but rather due to the payment of extremely high rates of interest to creditors and loss of tax revenues due to illicit capital outflows. Excessive military spending also took place before 2010.

More importantly, the report reveals how the first loan agreement of 2010 was used to rescue Greek and other European (especially German and French) private banks. The loan agreements of 2010 (and 2012) helped private banks and creditors to offload their risky bonds issued by the Greek government. In simple words, the risky assets of private banks was transformed into public sector debt via bailouts. As pointed out by Tim Jones of the Jubilee Debt Campaign, it is not the people of Greece who have benefited from the troikas bailout loans but the European and Greek banks which recklessly lent money to the Greek government in the first place.

Out of €254 billion lent to the Greek government by the troika since 2010, only 11 percent have been spent to meet government’s current expenditure. Of course, previous governments of Greece are equally responsible for spending beyond its means and falsifying public accounts.

Data source: MacroPolis, via the Financial Times

Who owns Greece’s public debt? Currently, close to 80 percent of Greece’s public debt is owned by public institutions, primarily from the EU (member-states of the EU, ECB, European Financial Stability Facility, and the IMF). The rest is owned by private creditors.

Data source: Open Europe, BIS, IMF, ECB. Credit: BBC

Austerity and humanitarian crisis

The social and economic consequences of austerity measures imposed by the troika on Greece have been devastating. Since 2010, Greece’s GDP has fallen by 25 percent and the unemployment rate is 26 percent. Youth unemployment rates are at an alarmingly high level. Currently, over 56 percent of young people in Greece are without a job and there are more than 450,000 families with no working members. After five years of fiscal adjustment and economic hardship under the austerity program, Greece’s major indicators (including GDP, employment and incomes levels) are still far below the pre-crisis levels.

The welfare spending cuts proved to be counter-productive. As pointed out by Ozlem Onaran of the University of Greenwich:

“The wage and pension cuts and fiscal consolidation led to lower GDP, tax losses, and higher public debt. Our estimates show that the fall in the wage share alone has led to a loss in GDP by 4.5%, and a 7.80% point increase in the public debt/GDP ratio. The fall in wages alone explains more than a quarter (27%) of the rise in the public debt/GDP ratio in this period. The conditionalities of the memoranda have not only been counterproductive in terms of its aims regarding debt sustainability, but also engineered a humanitarian crisis.”

Many legal experts argue that the harsh austerity program imposed by the troika could potentially pose a violation of human rights. According to Ilias Bantekas, Professor of International Law at Brunel University Law School, “The measures imposed against the Greek people were wholly antithetical to fundamental human rights as these stem from customary international law, multilateral treaties and the Greek constitution. Consequently, these ‘loans’ were held to be odious, illegal or illegitimate.”

It is pertinent to note that it was  not just in Greece that the austerity programs failed to yield positive results but in Cyprus, Spain and Ireland too.

Grexit: Pain and gain

What would happen if Greece abandons or is forced to exit the euro? In the short-term, it would certainly entail greater uncertainty and economic hardship. A massive capital flight by the elites along with the collapse of banks and businesses which have borrowed in euros cannot be ruled out. The payment of salaries and pensions could also be delayed for months.

The social and economic consequences could be disastrous for the Greek economy and its people if the transition from the euro to a new national currency (possibly the drachma, its old currency) is badly managed. Hence, the transition should be well-planned and properly implemented, with popular support.

There is growing consensus that a massive devaluation of the drachma would help in increasing domestic demand and improving the prospects of economic recovery. A weak drachma would make Greek exports more competitive and its tourism more attractive and therefore open up new opportunities to enhance exports and encourage more tourism over the long-term. Thanks to the common currency, no individual country can pursue a devaluation-driven expansionary strategy. Exports account for nearly 30 percent of Greek GDP. Because of a weak new drachma, the demand for domestic goods would increase as imports will become more expensive thereby boosting domestic demand which, in turn, would also encourage greater domestic production and create more jobs for the Greek people.

In addition, Greece will also regain its independent monetary and fiscal policy space to set policies in tune with its own economic needs instead of those of Eurozone economies. Needless to say, a small country like Greece (representing less than 2 percent of the EU’s GDP) should never have joined the flawed monetary union in the first place.

Economic, geopolitical ramifications

Greece leaving the euro will have serious economic ramifications for the rest of Europe. If Greece leaves the Eurozone, the threat of financial contagion spreading to other weak Eurozone economies (such as Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Italy) looms large and subsequently these economies may as well exit the euro. Not only would such a move would weaken the Eurozone but, more importantly, it would spell the end of the single currency experiment and the larger European project towards greater economic integration.

Besides, one cannot ignore the fact that the euro may face massive devaluation if international investors liquidate their European assets and investments en masse.

Furthermore, there are human and geopolitical ramifications which are not sufficiently understood by European leaders. How will the EU cope with the influx of migrants from North Africa who enter Europe (via Mediterranean route) without the active cooperation of the Greek government?

Technically speaking, an exit from the euro does not mean an exit from the EU. A Greek veto on extending sanctions against Russia over Ukraine would further weaken the European strategy to isolate Russia.

The observation made by many commentators that ‘Grexit’ would isolate the country from the world economy is highly misplaced. Greece can explore new economic partnerships and build strategic alliances with Russia, China and the developing world. Given its favourable geo-economic location in southern Europe, Greece can emerge as an important regional energy distribution hub. Greece has already launched discussions with Russia to build a gas pipeline to Greece via Turkey and then to Europe. This pipeline could bring immense benefits to Greece’s economy in terms of new investments and jobs. Greece is currently considering joining the New Development Bank (NDB) which was set up in 2014 by BRICS. Becoming a member of Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank is another possibility.

Both sides to deliver

In the last two months, the chasm between Athens and Brussels has widened to an alarming degree. Both sides need to show flexibility to come to a mutually satisfactory agreement on debt restructuring and payments. Unfortunately, the Eurozone leaders have explicitly ruled out any write-off of principal and are not interested in discussing debt relief before Greece implements an austerity program like the previous governments. Needless to say, the European leaders have to act more like statesmen as the European Union is founded on the values of respect for democracy, equality, human rights and solidarity.

Everyone agrees that Greece’s current public debt is unsustainable. Hence, debt relief should be the starting point for negotiating a new program. The Eurozone creditors should write off at least half of their debt to Greece while the Greek government needs to tackle massive tax evasion by the country’s oligarchs, besides streamlining its public finances in a time-bound manner.

The forthcoming referendum will be keenly watched by the world. Irrespective of its outcome, however one thing is certain: the Greek debt crisis saga is not going to end very soon.

Kavaljit Singh is Director of Madhyam, a policy research institute based in New Delhi.